Eleven dead in Nigeria church gun attack
Motive for attack unclear.
By Dan Wooding, Founder of ASSIST News Service
JOS, NIGERIA (ANS – August 6, 2017) –
At least 11 people were killed in an attack on a Catholic church
service in southern Nigeria today (Sunday, August 6, 2017) that
apparently was rooted in a conflict with a relative of one of the
parishioners, authorities said.
At
least 18 others were injured in the shooting at St. Philip’s Catholic
Church in Amakwa Ozobulu, near Onitsha of Ekwusigo Local Government Area
(LGA) in tiny Anambra state, a state official said.
A police statement emailed to Morning Star News (http://morningstarnews.org) stated that “unknown gunmen” attacked.
“Intelligence
report/preliminary investigation proved that it is a fight between the
two sons of the community living outside Nigeria that caused the
incident, because one of them built the church [at] which the incident
happened,” the statement said. “It is sacrilegious, but for now, [it] is
still premature to disclose the identities. We will brief the public
after investigation is concluded.”
Police
Commissioner Garba Umar told journalists that the shooting was the
result of a conflict between two Nigerian siblings now living in South
Africa. While asserting that the attack was carried out by local people,
he said it was rooted in conflict between the siblings’ rival gangs
abroad.
Text
messages and emails received by Morning Star News soon after the attack
indicated gunmen attacked as parishioners were worshiping during early
morning Mass at about 8 a.m.
“Commissioner
Umar commiserates with all those who lost their loved ones in the act
and pledges that the command would not rest on its oars until
perpetrators are brought to book,” the police statement read. “However,
citizens are advised to be vigilant and report suspicions movements and
actions in their locality.”
Anambra state spokesman Ifeanyi Aniagoh said in a statement that a lone gunman was responsible.
“The
Ozubulu community in Ekwusigo Local Government Area of Anambra state
were this morning thrown into mourning as a gunman walked into St.
Philip’s Catholic Church and started shooting sporadically, killing 11
and injuring 18 persons,” Aniagoh said.
The assailant reportedly targeted at least one person before opening fire on others.
The
Nigeria correspondent for Morning Star News stated that Umar had stated
that motives for the shooting were also based on one of the rival gang
member’s father being a member of the church.
A
police statement by Nwode Nkeiruka, an assistant superintendent of
police for Anambra state, said that eight worshipers were killed. He
described it as an unpardonable sin against the church.
State spokesman Aniagoh said the governor had visited the church site and the hospital where victims were taken.
“Speaking
at the church premises, the governor revealed that preliminary security
investigations show that the shooting was caused by a feud between two
brothers from the community living outside Nigeria,” Aniagoh said in his
statement. “The deeply saddened governor asked the people to go about
their businesses without fear or panic, noting that this isolated case
must be followed to the root and all perpetrators must be brought to
book.”
The dead and the injured were reportedly taken to Nnamdi Azikiwe University Teaching Hospital in Nnewi.
“Thanking
over 50 doctors who were on ground looking after the injured, the
governor assured their families that all medical bills will be taken
care of by the state government,” Aniagoh said.
Another
attack on a Catholic church in Anambra, this one politically motivated,
occurred more than a year ago. Nigerian security agents on May 30, 2016
killed eight Christians when the officers targeted secessionist Biafra
agitators at a church service in Nkpor town.
Morning
Star News said that Christians make up 51.3 percent of Nigeria’s
population, while Muslims living primarily in the north and middle belt
account for 45 percent.
Nigeria ranks 12th on Open Doors’ World Watch List of countries where Christians suffer the most persecution.
Photo
captions: 1) Crowds gathered in front of the church following the
attack (Reuters). 2) Exterior of worship site attacked in Amakwa Ozobulu
in Anambra state, Nigeria. (Morning Star News via Anambra Police). 3)
Dan and Norma Wooding at their Southern California home. (Photo: Sarah
Wooding).
About
the writer: Dan Wooding, 76, is an award-winning winning author,
broadcaster and journalist who was born in Nigeria of British missionary
parents, and is now living in Southern California with his wife Norma,
to whom he has been married for more than 54 years. Dan is the founder
and international director of ASSIST (Aid to Special Saints in Strategic
Times) and the ASSIST News Service (ANS). He is also the author of some
45 books and has two US-based TV programs and also a weekly radio show.
Dan’s most recent honor was a top humanitarian award at a film festival
in Beverly Hills, California, for his long-standing reporting on
persecuted Christians around the world.
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