At 11:40 on a Sunday night, gunmen stormed Kawel village, opening fire on sleeping residents and sending survivors fleeing into the darkness.
When the shooting stopped, at least 19 were dead, and several others were wounded, the latest unprovoked massacre to strike Plateau State’s beleaguered Bokkos LGA.
“A youth leader called around 12 a.m. and reported that gunmen attacked the community and shot several people. So far, 19 deaths have been confirmed,” Bokkos Youth Leader Christopher Luka said in a statement confirming the attack.
Luka said that upon receiving the distress call, he immediately alerted security personnel stationed in Bokkos. “I contacted security personnel, and they confirmed they had received information about the incident and were moving to the affected community,” he added.
But for the people of Kawel village, the response came too late.
Malo Bitrus, a resident of Bokkos who spoke to journalists in the immediate aftermath of the attack, described scenes of chaos and panic as the gunmen swept through the sleeping village.
The assailants shot indiscriminately as they moved, giving residents little time to react or escape. Many fled into the surrounding darkness with nothing but their lives.
According to security sources, troops responded to distress calls at around 1:20 a.m. after the armed men launched the coordinated assault. Upon arrival, troops discovered bodies across the village. The attackers had already escaped by the time security operatives reached the scene.
The attack unfolded with a precision and brutality that has become grimly familiar to communities across Bokkos LGA, where late-night raids on farming villages have claimed dozens of lives over the past several months.
What makes Sunday night’s massacre all the more alarming is its timing. The latest killings come less than a week after the murder of the District Head of Gwande in Bokkos LGA, Saf Samuel Alaket, who was reportedly attacked along the Sha-Daffo axis while returning from a traditional council meeting.
The killing of a traditional ruler, a figure of community authority and symbolic peace, had already sent shockwaves through the region. Now, with another mass killing added to the toll, residents and community leaders are struggling to process the compounding grief.
Luka, who has now become an unwilling spokesperson for a community under sustained siege, did not mince his words. He described Sunday’s attack as unprovoked and called on security agencies to intensify efforts to prevent further violence and provide greater protection for vulnerable communities.
Sunday’s attack is not an isolated incident it is the latest chapter in a long and bloody story.
Between October 2025 and March 2026, Plateau State experienced a surge in communal violence characterized by a cycle of ambushes, communal attacks, invasions, land-grabbing, livestock killings, reprisal attacks, and unprovoked assaults that resulted in unprecedented loss of lives.
The renewed violence has heightened concerns over security in Bokkos and surrounding communities, which have witnessed recurring attacks in recent months.
Farmers, miners, community leaders, and now ordinary villagers asleep in their beds have all become targets. The pattern is consistent: armed men strike at night, kill swiftly, and vanish before security forces arrive.
Plateau State Governor Caleb Mutfwang has previously spoken forcefully about the nature of these attacks. In an earlier interview, the governor described the killings in Bokkos as an act of genocide and part of a deliberate effort to impoverish the community and displace them from their ancestral lands, warning of an emerging pattern of violence closely linked to the farming seasons in the area.
Despite the scale and urgency of Sunday’s massacre, official confirmation remained elusive as of the time of filing this report. The Plateau State Police Command and Operation Safe Haven had yet to issue official statements on the incident, despite efforts to obtain confirmation from their spokespeople.
That silence, familiar, frustrating, and increasingly indefensible, only deepens the despair of communities who feel abandoned by the institutions meant to protect them.
For the people of Kawel village, the gunshots have faded. The bodies have been counted. And the questions of who sent these men, why this has been allowed to continue, and who will be next hang unanswered over Mushere District like smoke that will not clear.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Plateau State’s Bokkos Local Government Area is caught in a worsening cycle of bloodshed that authorities have failed to break.
The massacre of at least 19 sleeping villagers in Kawel, coming just five days after the killing of a district head, is not a random tragedy but the latest symptom of a deep, persistent security failure. Armed attackers continue to strike at will, kill without consequence, and disappear before security forces arrive.
Until the government moves beyond condemnation and delivers decisive, on-the-ground protection for these vulnerable rural communities, no one in Bokkos can afford to sleep soundly.
























