Gunmen kill at least 30 in weekend attacks in northern Nigeria

BAUCHI, Nigeria (Reuters) - Gunmen in Nigeria have killed at least 30 people and kidnapped a number of children in separate attacks in three northern states, police and residents said, the latest incidents in a region dogged by armed violence.

Armed gangs on motorbikes frequently take advantage of thinly stretched security forces in the region to kidnap villagers, motorists and students for ransom.

Residents said armed men had attacked Janbako and Sakkida villages in northwestern Zamfara state on Saturday, killing 24 people. The gunmen also abducted several children who were collecting firewood in a forest in neighbouring Gora village.

Police spokesperson Ahmad Rufai said the neigbouring state of Sokoto was also attacked in five villages of Tangaza local government on Saturday, with the dead buried on Sunday.

Hussaini Ahmadu and Abubakar Maradun, local residents in Janbako and Sakkida, told Reuters by phone that the gangs earlier in the week had demanded that villagers pay a fee to enable them to farm their fields but villagers did not do so.

Zamfara police spokesman Yazid Abubakar confirmed the attacks but said only 13 people had been reported killed and nine young boys and girls kidnapped.

Gunmen killed 25 people and set their houses on fire during an attack on Saturday on the Imande Mbakange community in north central Benue state, two residents said. The motive of the attack was not known.

(Reporting by Ardo Hazzad in Bauchi and Ahmed Kingimi in Maiduguri; Writing by MacDonald Dzirutwe; Editing by David Holmes and Mark Porter)