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Nigeria [2] [7] [c] Deewell: Early 1990s Nigeria [2] [d] Dreaded Friend of Friends: Early 1990s Nigeria [2] Eagle Club: Early 1990s Nigeria [2] Eternal Fraternal Order of the Legion Consortium (aka Klan Konfraternity) KK 1983 University of Calabar: Calabar, Nigeria [3] [2] [9] Executioners: Early 1990s Nigeria [2] Fame: Early 1990s Nigeria [2 ...
Nigerian education minister Tunde Adeniran later dismissed Omole and ordered university administrators to eradicate confraternities from their campuses by September 1999. [11] In response, hundreds of cult members publicly renounced their confraternity and cult-associated violence temporarily subsided.
The Obafemi Awolowo University massacre was a mass murder of students of Obafemi Awolowo University in Ile-Ife, Osun State, Nigeria on 10 July 1999. [1] Five students of OAU were killed and eleven injured. [2] It was perpetrated by an organized death squad of 40 members of the Black Axe Confraternity branch at the university. They invaded the ...
Mass murders and robberies in three locations. May 3-5, 2020: Plateau State 4 Messiah College High School was closed due to COVID-19, but the attackers stormed the on-campus home of the school's leader. He was shot in the head, while his wife was shot in the back and his two children were shot in the feet. They survived the wounds. [68] June 3 ...
This is a list of mass/spree killers who attacked schools. A mass murderer is typically defined as someone who kills three or more people in one incident, with no "cooling off" period. [72] [73] A mass murder typically occurs in a single location where one or more persons kill several others. [74] [75] [76]
Shootings that murder and injure multiple people in one place and time in Nigeria, different from a Spree shooting. Subcategories This category has only the following subcategory.
Confraternities in Nigeria; B. Black Axe (confraternity) C. List of confraternities in Nigeria; D. De Norsemen Kclub of Nigeria; N. National Association of Seadogs;
More than 10,000 children are no longer able to attend school due to attacks by Boko Haram. [2] Roughly 20,000 people fled Yobe State to Cameroon during June 2013 to escape the violence. [3] In June 2013, Nigerian soldiers beat students at a Koran-based school, angering Boko Haram members. [2]