National Christian leader calls Islamic extremist assaults 'genocide'
By Dan Wooding, who was born in Nigeria
Founder of ASSIST Ministries
ABUJA, NIGERIA
(ANS) -- Impunity
for terrorists and state-sponsored discrimination against Christians in
northern Nigeria has led not to sectarian war but to "genocide," the
general secretary of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) told
Morning Star News (http://morningstarnews.org).
Boko Haram terrorists are tragetting Christians
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"There is no prosecution of those
who kill, and this has encouraged these Boko Haram members to continue
to bomb Christian areas, while Fulani herdsmen continue to attack and
kill Christians in rural areas of northern part of this country with
impunity," Musa said.
"From our records,
day-in-day-out, Christians in the north are under an unprecedented siege
by various groups of well-armed, roundly trained and heavily funded
Muslim groups bent on expressing their hate against Christians and the
Christian faith through mindless, mass murder of men, women and
children."
Christian villagers burying hundreds of bodies in mass graves after another massacre in Nigeria
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In a report entitled "Boko
Haram's Religiously Motivated Attacks" issued on Monday (Aug. 19),
USCIRF asserted that the Nigerian government's "toleration of communal,
sectarian violence has created a permissive environment conducive to
further violence and a culture of impunity."
The reports states, "Nigeria has the capacity to address
communal, sectarian and Boko Haram violence by enforcing the rule of law
and making perpetrators accountable through the judicial system, and
not relying solely on a counterterrorism strategy involving the security
services.
"Such an approach would help Nigeria realize lasting progress, security, stability, and prosperity as a democracy."
A Christian women was slain at the side of the road by extremists
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"Acting on such an understanding
would better position the United States to engage with both the Nigerian
government at all levels and key religious leaders who view the
violence partly through a sectarian lens," the report says. "The United
States also should do more to encourage and support the Nigerian
government's efforts to provide additional security personnel to protect
northern Christian minorities and clerics and Muslim traditional rulers
who denounce Boko Haram attacks, and consider creating a witness
protection-like program."
USCIRF documented at least 50
Boko Haram assaults on churches that took place between Jan. 1, 2012
and July 31, 2013, resulting in the deaths of 336 people. In addition,
USCIRF reports 31 separate attacks on Christians or southerners
perceived to be Christian, killing at least 166 persons; 23 targeted
attacks on clerics or senior Islamic figures critical of Boko Haram,
killing at least 60 persons; and 21 attacks on "un-Islamic" institutions
or persons engaged in "un-Islamic" behavior, killing at least 74.
Boko Haram victims being loaded onro a truck in Nigeria
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"Boko Haram continues to target
and kill individual Christians and southerners," the USCIRF report
states, noting among them the Nov. 25, 2012 shooting deaths of a
Christian couple and their son in Kano, Kano state; the Dec. 1, 2012
slitting of the throats of Christians in attacks on four churches; and
the May 14 slaying in Maiduguri, Borno state of the Rev. Faye Pama Musa,
secretary of the Borno state CAN. On July 30, in Kano, four bombs
exploded in the Christian area of Sabon Gari, killing at least 45
persons and damaging two churches, the report notes.
Citing "continued
Muslim-Christian violence" as well as Boko Haram murders, the USCIRF
report states that religion has become an increasingly key factor, "as
much of the violence results from the misuse of 'faith' to foster
political, economic, and/or ethnic discord, thereby elevating religious
identifications and transforming violence in Nigeria's north and Middle
Belt into religious conflicts."
Morning Star News goes on to
say that Christian leaders in the country assert that the vast majority
of "sectarian violence" is Muslim aggression that Nigeria's Islamist
media portray as Muslim-Christian clashes. They say that in the rare
instances of impoverished rural Christians coming into possession of
weapons - in contrast with outside Islamic terrorist groups heavily
arming Nigerian Muslim extremists - Christians use them only in
self-defense.
Asake said oppression of Christians includes discrimination and deprivation of rights.
Survivors of a mass killing at a Christian school where students were burned alive by terrorists
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"In the past 13 years, some of the governments in these mentioned states have refused to grant new building permits to churches or give approval for the renovation or expansion of churches," he added. Some pastors have been given six months to vacate their church sites, he said.
"Authorities in the affected
villages gave a six-month ultimatum to pastors of the affected churches
to quit the churches or face the consequence," he said. "For instance, a
Muslim leader, one Adamu Mohamed Dahiru, ordered that pastors should
not rebuild their churches but to quit the areas within six months and
find somewhere else to worship. This is contrary to the spirit of the
constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, which guarantees every
Nigerian the rights to association and worship."
Converts from Islam are especially targeted, he said.
"Any Muslim that converts to
Christianity in these northern Nigerian states is declared an apostate
and faces severe persecution in flagrant violation of his free choice of
religion," Asake said. "Indigenes of these states who are Christians
are treated as inferior and suffer untold injustice, oppression, and
cannot rise beyond certain levels in the states' public services, no
matter how educated they are."
See all ASSIST News articles at www.assistnews.net
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