Select Page

Two churches attacked in northern Nigeria

ROME – Two days after the funerals were held for the 40 people gunned down during Mass on Pentecost, Nigeria saw yet another attack to churches on Sunday, one Catholic and one Baptist. At least three people were killed, and over 30 kidnapped.

It was in the rural northwestern state of Kaduna that gunmen attacked two churches, the Maranatha Baptist Church and at St. Moses Catholic Church in Rubu community. The attack targeted four villages, resulting in the abduction of an unspecified number of residents and the destruction of houses before the assailants escaped.

It isn’t clear who was behind the attack on the Kaduna churches. Much of Nigeria has struggled with security issues, with Kaduna being one of the worst-hit states. At least 32 people were killed in the Kajuru area last week in an attack that lasted for hours. Witnesses said the criminals had helicopters, but the local government refuted this, saying the helicopter was used by authorities in a rescue mission.

RELATED: Nigerian archbishop: Religious persecution is ‘systematic’ in country’s north

Worshippers were attending service Sunday morning when assailants came and surrounded the buildings. Most of the victims kidnapped are from the Baptist community, while the three killed were Catholics.

The Kaduna state government confirmed the three deaths by bandits who “stormed the villages on motorcycles, beginning from Ungwan Fada, and moving into Ungwan Turawa, before Ungwan Makama and then Rubu. Security patrols are being conducted in the general area” as investigations proceed, according to Samuel Aruwan, Kaduna commissioner for security.

The Christian Association of Nigeria condemned Sunday’s attacks and said churches in Nigeria have become “targets” of armed groups.

“It is very unfortunate that when we are yet to come out of the mourning of those killed in Owo two Sundays ago, another one has happened in Kaduna,” Pastor Adebayo Oladeji, the association’s spokesman, told The Associated Press.

A funeral Mass was held on Friday for the victims of the gun attack June 6 at the St. Francis Catholic Church in Owo, Ondo State, southwestern Nigeria.

“We have failed to defend these people – not because we are not trying but because the forces on the other side are evil and they have support,” said Ondo State Governor Rotimi Akeredolu during the funeral.

Bishop Jude Arogundade of the Ondo diocese accused Nigerian authorities of making “all these empty promises” to find the killers and urged attendees at the funeral to “claim this country back from those destroying it.”

Several members of the clergy have also been kidnapped in recent weeks, including an Anglican bishop and his wife, and kidnappers have set a N50 million ransom ($120,000).

Many of the attacks targeting rural areas in Nigeria’s troubled northern region are similar. The motorcycle-riding gunmen often arrive in hundreds in areas where Nigeria’s security forces are outnumbered and outgunned. It usually takes months for the police to make arrests.

Authorities have identified the attackers as mostly young herdsmen from the Fulani tribe caught up in Nigeria’s conflict between host communities and herdsmen over limited access to water and land.

Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country, is one where Muslim-Christian tensions have long flared, particularly since the rise of Muslim terrorist organization Boko Haram over a decade ago. Though many human rights organizations have this country in their regular watch lists when it comes to religious freedom and anti-Christian persecution, the U.S. State Department last year took the country off the watchlist included in the annual Report on International Religious Freedom.

The country of 200 million is evenly split between Christians and Muslims, and the tensions between the two communities are often multifaceted. They may include disputes over land and cattle grazing rights, for example, or tribal differences.

In recent years, however, the rise of Islamist terrorist organizations in Nigeria has meant religion is a greater factor, as is the fact that in the northern region of the country some courts rely on Islamic law.

It’s difficult to nail down exact statistics on religiously motivated violence facing Christians in Nigeria, but the number of Nigerians who have died directly or indirectly due to Islamist fueled conflict runs into the hundreds of thousands, according to the United Nations.

As Archbishop Matthew Man-oso Ndagoso of Kaduna said last month, in Nigeria’s northern region “religious persecution is systemic.”

“People are not pursued with a knife all the time, but there are unwritten laws that limit Christian’s freedom to practice our religion,” Ndagoso said. “You are not free to get land, pay for it, and build a church on it. Pastors are not free to preach the Gospel.”

Follow Inés San Martín on Twitter: @inesanma

About The Author

Recent Comments

    Categories