9 min 3 yrs

BY : Morning Star News Nigeria Correspondent | Morning Star News 

ABUJANigeria, (Morning Star News) – More than 100 suspected Fulani herdsmen and Islamic extremist terrorists on Sunday night (March 20) killed 32 civilians, two soldiers and possibly abducted a woman in an attack on a predominantly Christian town in Nigeria, sources said.

“Over 25 Christians were killed, and houses and properties were burnt to ashes in an attack carried out by armed Fulani terrorists in Kagoro,” town resident Samson Luka said in a text message to Morning Star News.

Area resident Violet Peter said she was unable to make contact with relatives.

“My mum’s family houses were all razed down, and one of my cousins was burnt to death in their house,” Peter said. “We haven’t been able to reach some of our relatives. Lord please, this is too much for us.”

Added resident Flora Kundi, “This is too much for us, my colleague has been killed.”

Two military personnel were killed along with 32 residents of the Tsonje, Agban, Katanga and Kadarko areas of Kagoro, said Samuel Aruwan, Kaduna state commissioner of the Ministry of Internal Security and Home Affairs.

Kagoro resident Jonathan Kish Adamu said he visited injured Christians being treated at the Evangelical Church Winning All (ECWA) Health Centre in Fada, Kagoro on Monday morning (March 21). Favour Gimbiya Shekari said she heard gunshots from her base at the ECWA Theological Seminary, Kagoro.

“I’ve never experienced what I did last night,” she said. “We could hear the gunshots very close to us. This is not the country we were enjoying before. Our children can’t go to school today; we don’t know our fate anymore.”

Other comments by area residents echoed the despair: “Is this a war declared against Christians?” asked Florence Tachio. Mercy Waziri said, “I weep for my people! O Lord, arise and let our enemies be scattered!!” Gloria Nyan noted, “The attack on Kagoro last night led to the killing of innocent men, women and children in their homes, and houses in the community were destroyed. This atrocity will never go unpunished, no matter how they try to change the narrative.”

Aruwan said seven people were injured and were receiving hospital treatment: Ndau Abba, Mani Luka, Habila Sambo, Ibrahim Daniel, Julius Tachio, Rose Sunday and Sadunga Kamai.

He gave the name of the missing woman as, “Mrs. Abigail Joshua, from Adan community.” More than 200 houses and 32 shops were set ablaze in the attack, and three vehicles and 17 motorcycles were vandalized, he added.

On Monday (March 21), the government imposed an indefinite, 24-hour curfew on two council areas of Kaura and Jema’a counties. Forcing residents to remain indoors could further endanger lives of Christians in the area, church leaders said.

The Rev. John Joseph Hayab, chairman of the Kaduna state chapter of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), said in a statement on Tuesday (March 22) that Christians were grieving “the continued killings, kidnappings, banditry, and the unimaginable evil going on in our state unabated without any substantial action by the government and security forces.”

“Kaduna state citizens are tired of the government’s rhetorical responses without concrete action taken to protect lives and property,” the Baptist pastor said. “Accordingly, we want to hear and see the killers and kidnappers arrested, as the government’s usual media condemnation whenever there is havoc is not good enough.”

“The government’s response is usually in the media. Sadly, the dead cannot read nor listen to the news,” Hayab said. “CAN, therefore, calls on the Kaduna state government to swallow her pride and accept that she has failed the people genuinely seeking help to immediately halt the wanton killings, kidnappings, and terrorist activities going on in the state.”

The Nigeria office of Amnesty International also issued a statement strongly condemning unabated attacks in Kaduna state and calling on the federal government to end them.

CHIKUN ATTACK

On the outskirts of Kaduna city, in Chikun County’s Gonin Gora village, suspected Islamic terrorists on March 11 killed three Christians and abducted four others, local resident said.

Maxwell Bage said the assailants killed his father and brother.

“I have always heard of kidnapping but never knew it would come right at my doorstep,” Bage said. “I am now a victim as my Dad, Funom Bage, 57, and elder brother, James Bage, 30, were killed right in our house.”

Local resident Angela Kaboshio said the father and son were killed while they slept in their house.

“One other Christian, their neighbor, was also killed during the attack,” Kaboshio said. “Four Christian women were also kidnapped by the terrorists. God, please show us your mercy, and may their souls rest in peace.”

Hayab of CAN confirmed the killing of the three Christians and the kidnapping of the four Christian women. He said raids by armed Muslim terrorists and Fulani herdsmen have become so common that Christians are tired of reporting them, especially in light of the lukewarm response of the Nigerian government.

He noted authorities did nothing to rescued recently kidnapped Christians or arrest the perpetrators.

“Recently, in the Kudendan community in the city of Kaduna, terrorists kidnapped a Catholic priest, the Rev. Fr. Joseph Akete of St. John Catholic Church, Kudenda, and his church’s security man, Mr. Luka was killed,” he said. “The priest was kidnapped alongside others, and nothing has been done to rescue them.”

In Dutsen Gayan village, Kajuru County, 11 Christians were kidnapped on March 5, he said.

“Another person was killed in the community the same day by the bandits,” Hayab said.

Numbering in the millions across Nigeria and the Sahel, predominantly Muslim Fulani comprise hundreds of clans of many different lineages who do not hold extremist views, but some Fulani do adhere to radical Islamist ideology, the United Kingdom’s All-Party Parliamentary Group for International Freedom or Belief (APPG) noted in a recent report.

“They adopt a comparable strategy to Boko Haram and ISWAP [Islamic State West Africa Province] and demonstrate a clear intent to target Christians and potent symbols of Christian identity,” the APPG report states.

Christian leaders in Nigeria have said they believe herdsmen attacks on Christian communities in Nigeria’s Middle Belt are inspired by their desire to forcefully take over Christians’ lands and impose Islam as desertification has made it difficult for them to sustain their herds.

Nigeria trailed only China in the number of churches attacked, with 470 cases, according to the report.

In the 2022 World Watch List of the countries where it is most difficult to be a Christian, Nigeria jumped to seventh place, its highest ranking ever, from No. 9 the previous year.

Photo courtesy: ©MSN/Jonathan Kish Adamu

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