Dark memories of Sept. 11, 2001 strike a special chord with Nigerians who lost everything that same day in the idyllic hilltop town of Rankum, south of Jos. Unnoticed by Nigeria’s press and overshadowed by the sensational attacks in the United States, the brutal murder of 200 Christian residents by Fulani militants remains a traumatic memory for survivors who remain uncompensated by the Nigerian government. Today, the former affluent farming town of Rankum has been renamed “Mahanga” and converted to an armed Muslim zone, according to human rights attorney Solomon Dalyop. “Mahanga came about as a result of an invasion of armed Fulani militias,” Dalyop told the Epoch Times. Dalyop was a student living in the neighboring town of Jol and remembers seeing clouds of dark smoke rising from Rankum that day. “It was one of the richest sites in Plateau state. The inhabitants were millionaires by today’s standards due …