More than 100 armed jihadists dressed in army fatigues rode into the neighbouring Muslim villages of Woro and Nuku in Nigeria’s western state of Kwara on motorbikes – driven by revenge.
“They came en masse in the name of religion, and they decided to kill our people,” Abdulla Umar Usman, a former teacher and resident of Woro, told the BBC, explaining how the attack, in which at least 75 people are so far known to have been killed, unfolded.
The mayhem started an hour before sunset on Tuesday as residents of the farming community were heading home from their fields, where they grow yams, maize and millet.
The militants headed straight to the home of traditional leader Umar Bio Salihu – because they had written to him asking if they could come and preach what is considered an extremist version of Islam, which the community did not welcome.

