Christians in northeast Nigeria are paying a heavy
price at the hands of Boko Haram, even if they are not being targeted
specifically by the militants in their bloody quest for an Islamic
state.
Several towns in the northeastern states of Yobe, Borno
and Adamawa have been attacked in recent weeks, sending thousands of
residents fleeing and raising concerns about the speed of the Islamists'
deadly rampage.
Madagali in Adamawa has a large number of Christians
and was overrun last week. The Islamists also seized Gulak, the
headquarters of Madagali local government council, this weekend.
The Islamists vandalised and destroyed churches and
church buildings and singled out Christians who remained, according to
residents.
"Christians in the town are really in a terrible
situation, a moment of great persecution," said Father Gideon Obasogie,
the spokesman for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Maiduguri, which
stretches from Yobe, through Borno to Adamawa.
"Christian men were caught and beheaded, the women were forced to become Muslim and were taken as wives to the terrorists.
"Some Boko Haram sympathisers around the town
identified Christian homes to be occupied and the Christians hiding were
also identified and killed. Strict Sharia law had been promulgated."
Schools, Christian churches and religious buildings have been repeatedly attacked and razed during the five-year insurgency.
A declaration by Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau in a
video released last month that the captured Borno town of Gwoza was
now part of an Islamic caliphate has only heightened Christian fears of
persecution.
But the Bishop of Maiduguri, Oliver Dashe, told AFP:
"Both Christians and Muslims are always killed because a bomb blast does
not discriminate between who is a Christian or a Muslim.
"However, from the waves of recent attacks, you could
clearly say that the Christians are worst hit," he said in an email
interview.
Figures compiled by the diocese based on the testimony of residents and parishioners who have fled make for sober reading.
Bishop Oliver said that more than 90,000 Catholics had been displaced in the recent fighting.
Between 2009 when the insurgency began and this year,
more than 500 Catholics have been killed, 50 churches destroyed and
three schools, including a seminary, razed. Nine other church schools
have been shut.
According to the United Nations, at least 650,000
people have fled their homes in recent years because of Boko Haram
violence, fear of attack but also the often indiscriminate and violent
reprisals by security forces.
Since 2009, the insurgency in Africa's most populous
nation has claimed at least 10,000 lives according to the authorities
but the true figure is impossible to verify independently.
"The situation for now seems out of control," said Bishop Dashe. "The terrorists should embrace dialogue and drop their arms."
Nigeria specialist Marc-Antoine Perouse de Montclos,
said the Boko Haram insurgency is not an "inter-religious" conflict
pitting Muslims against Christians.
"It's mainly a war between Muslims, an insurrection of
Islamists against those who they consider bad Muslims," said Perouse de
Montclos, from the French Institute of Geopolitics in Paris.
"Boko Haram has existed for about 15 years and they have attacked Christians but the majority of the victims are Muslims."
The heavily-armed group has previously attacked senior
Muslim figures for recognising and working with the constitutionally
secular Nigerian government.
In Gamboru Ngala, a border town in Borno's far
northeast which was overrun last week, the Islamists executed the town's
most senior Muslim cleric, residents said.
The Emir of Gwoza was also killed in May during an
attack on his convoy. Two other traditional rulers were attacked but
escaped unharmed.
Boko Haram has even tried to assassinate two of the
most senior and influential Muslim figures in Nigeria: the late emir of
Kano and the Shehu of Borno, the number two and three Muslim leaders in
the country.
The most senior figure, the Sultan of Sokoto, has also been threatened.
"Boko Haram's agenda has not changed since its beginnings in 2002," said Perouse de Montclos.
"The insurrection aims to establish a caliphate under Sharia (Islamic law), an enclave from a corrupted Muslim world."
US Assistant Secretary of State Linda Thomas-Greenfield
said on Thursday in Abuja that her country was concerned by increasing
Boko Haram violence and territorial gains in Nigeria, warning that the
deteriorating situation threatened the African giant's future. (SAPA)
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Listen to us on streaming internet radio at: Tunein and from our website at: PEFM
International Correspondent Scott Congdon can be reached at:
Mail: scottcpefm@gmail.com
Phone: 010 500 8203 (in South Africa) (Available 3-5pm SAST weekdays)
011 27 10 500 8203 (calling from outside of South Africa) (Available 3-5pm SAST weekdays)
*Note: Views expressed in the commentaries on this website are those of individual authors and not necessarily those of PEFM 87.6or our presenters or correspondents. Quotes are obviously the opinion of the source. A quote is just a quote and these are offered without comment. Use of a news story or commentary is not an endorsement of the source website.
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