Nigeria's police chief has vowed that police officials in Nigeria's central Plateau State will be held responsible for future violent incidents.
Ogbonna Onovo made his comments while on a visit to the region, which has seen two massacres in just three months.
"Henceforth, DPOs [district police officers] will be held responsible for any such attacks in their areas of jurisdiction," Onovo said.
"We will provide more logistics and incentives to the police in Plateau State for the effective maintenance of law and order in the state."
He urged police officers to act promptly on intelligence reports on such attacks and promised to help the state police command in its operations.
More than 500 people predominantly Christian villagers near the central city of Jos, were killed last week in an attack blamed on Muslim Hausa-Fulani herders from nearby hills.
Residents said the herders attacked the village of Dogo Nahawa, about 15km south of Jos, shooting into the air before using machetes to cut down those who came out of their homes.
Nigerian authorities have arrested nearly a hundred people in connection with the attacks.
In January, hundreds of people, mainly Muslims, were killed in similar clashes in the region.
David Zounmenou, an expert on Nigeria at the South African Centre for Security Studies in Pretoria, warned there was a real danger the violence seen in Jos could spread to other parts of Nigeria.
"There are deep divisions in Nigerian society and some people within communities still feel excluded from access to power, resources and if you look specifically at Jos, what is happening is a clash between those who feel they are settlers and those who are nomads who feel cut off from their land," told Al Jazeera.
"As a result, those issues faced in Jos, the Niger Delta and southern parts of the country need to be dealt with carefully if Nigeria is to stand the test of time."