*** Mobs send Nigerians fleeing in Jos following Palm Sunday shooting | THE DAILY TRIBUNE | KINGDOM OF BAHRAIN

Mobs send Nigerians fleeing in Jos following Palm Sunday shooting

AFP | Jos

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Mobs formed across the Nigerian city of Jos Wednesday morning, an AFP reporter saw, appearing to lead to the deaths of two people, with others wounded by gunshots in the ensuing mayhem.

The chaos comes after unidentified gunmen killed around 30 people in a bar over the weekend, prompting accusations on social media -- without evidence -- that Christians were targeted on Palm Sunday, which marks the run-up to Easter.

With violence threatening to spill across the city, the University of Jos ordered the "evacuation" of its student housing over the course of Wednesday and Thursday, saying that the state government was providing transport.

Jos, the capital of Plateau state in north-central Nigeria, is home to a mixed population of Christians and Muslims, many of whom live peacefully side by side.

But the city is also riven with ethnic and religious tension that has sparked deadly sectarian riots in the past.

It's unclear who formed the mobs or who they were targeting.

Sani Danladi Marshall, a used car dealer, was at his house which doubles as his business premise, when he saw a group of youths appearing from different directions. They stopped a commuter taxi and pulled out two passengers.

"They hit one of them with stones, they hit him again till he died. They pushed his dead body into a ditch," he told AFP. The second person escaped.

Another resident, Usman Musa, 31, told AFP at the Ghambazi hospital, he was shot by unknown assailants.

"I was rushed to hospital and having regained my consciousness, I saw my other colleagues in the same condition," he said.

It was unclear if he and his colleague, Jibril Nasir, were targeted intentionally or hit by stray bullets amid the wider chaos.

"I don't know who shot at us," said Nasir, 28, who works with Musa in the tin mining sector.

Earlier in the day, an AFP reporter in Jos saw a crowd of people form and smash cars, a "keke" tricycle taxi set ablaze, and crowds running for safety. Elsewhere, the reporter saw two bodies in the street.

Streets were largely deserted Wednesday afternoon as security forces including the military deployed around the city.

That morning they had at times shot into the air to disperse crowds.