NIGERIA: ISLAMIST GROUP ATTACKING CHRISTIANS IN KWARA STATE

http://www.compassdirect.org/en/display.php?page=news&lang=en&length=long&idelement=5519

ILORIN, Nigeria, August 14 (Compass Direct News) – Blaming the death of
their leader on Christian prayers, an Islamist group that launched a
hate campaign in response to an evangelistic event in 2004 is reportedly
attacking Christians in this Kwara state capital with renewed virulence,
area Christians said.

At least three Christians have died and several others have been injured
in attacks with machetes and other weapons since June, clergymen said.
They said the attacks began after the death in May of Dr. Ali Olukade,
head of a local group of Islamists called Tibliq, possibly patterned
after the worldwide Tablighi Jamaat missionary movement.

Dr. Olukade was critically injured in an auto accident in 2006, and
after extensive recovery efforts he succumbed to his injuries in May.
His extremist followers, according to the Rev. Cornelius Fawenu,
secretary of the Kwara chapter of the Christian Association of Nigeria
(CAN), believe that his death was the result of prayers by Christians
upset when Muslim threats cut short a major event by German evangelist
Reinhard Bonnke in 2004.

Islamic uproar over the evangelistic event in Ilorin forced it to a
venue outside the city, and Bonnke had to “abort” three days of the
planned five-day event, Rev. Fawenu said.

When the local Tibliq leader was injured in the car crash in 2006, Rev.
Fawenu said, “The members of his Muslim sect went on rampage,
demonstrating against America and the state of Israel, over claims that
it was the prayers of Christians over the aborting of the gospel event
of 2004 that caused their leader to be involved in an auto crash. Dr.
Olukade, the Muslim sect’s leader, died in May 2008, and since then
Muslim fanatics have embarked in serial killings and attacks on
Christians in the city.”

The group from the Tibliq movement in Ilorin, Rev. Fawenu said, had
spear-headed opposition to the evangelistic event.

The Kwara chapter of CAN has received 10 reports of Christians attacked
by the Muslim extremists in the past two months, Rev. Fawenu said,
adding that he believes unreported assaults on Christians average about
four daily.

Facts on even the confirmed reports, however, are few. Last month the
state CAN chapter petitioned the inspector general of police to
investigate the attacks on Christians in Ilorin, which Rev. Fawenu said
resulted in the death of a former leader of an Evangelical Church of
West Africa congregation known only as Pastor Habila. The former church
leader was assaulted in the Oke Oba area of Ilorin in June and died on
June 15 from his injuries, Rev. Fawenu said.

“The corpse of another Christian victim was found along stadium road,
with his Bible beside him, on June 18,” Rev. Fawenu said. “So also, a
young Christian girl living near the stadium road was also murdered in
the same manner within this period.”

The Kwara state CAN leader said he did not have the names of these
victims but that their deaths resulted from attacks that fit a pattern
of other area assaults – taking place after dark as Christians either
went to or returned from church services.

Another church leader injured from an attack, he said, is known only as
Pastor Olagunjo. Rev. Fawenu said the assaults have reduced attendance
at Christian worship services in the state.

Survivors

The Kwara chapter of CAN staged a three-day prayer rally over the
attacks from June 30 to July 2, which drew large crowds.

Samuel Ajiboye, pastor of New Testament Christian Mission in Ilorin,
told Compass that Muslim extremists attacked a member of his church,
Nanle Nathaniel, in June.

“Nanle Nathaniel was attacked on June 11 near our church,” Ajiboye said.
“He saw a man with a machete coming towards him, and before he realized
what was happening, the man cut him on his head with the machete, and
thereafter fled.”

Ajiboye added that Nathaniel shouted and dragged himself to a nearby
house, where neighbors phoned the pastor, and he told them to take
Nathaniel to the University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital. At press time
Nathaniel was still receiving treatment for nerve damage on his head, he
said.

Ajiboye echoed the Kwara state CAN leader’s assertion that there are
many Christian victims of such attacks, and that some of them have died.

Another survivor was Rachael Harry of Blessed Chapel, a church in the
Sango area of Ilorin. Attacked on June 25, she also received head
injuries for which she received hospital treatment, according to
70-year-old pastor and photojournalist Gabriel Oki Olufemi, of Chapel of
Redemption church in Ilorin.

“While being attacked, she was rescued by her neighbors,” Olufemi told
Compass. “I was there shortly after she was attacked, and I personally
took pictures of her and interviewed her.”

Olufemi said Harry was about 100 meters from her house when she was
attacked. “She was a trader returning from the Ministry of Agriculture,
where she sells food,” he said, adding that she was attacked at about 7
p.m. near the home of her pastor, who was out of town at the time.

“Only yesterday [August 7], I was told that another Christian was
attacked by the railway station in the city,” Olufemi said. “The police
recovered an iron rod from the scene where she was attacked. All those
killed or attacked are Christians.”

Olufemi said he interviewed another girl who was attacked near the venue
of the June 30-July 2 prayer rally. “So also,” he said, “a young
Christian man was attacked while on his way from night vigil in his church.”

Islamist Sect Fingered

The group said to be behind the attacks, Tibliq, may reflect the
influence of the radical Sunni Tablighi Jamaat, a worldwide missionary
movement originating in India in 1927.

Active in north African countries such as Morocco and Algeria, the
secretive Tablighi Jamaat describes itself as pietistic but comprises an
extremist wing that advocates jihad through the sword, according to a
2005 article in the Middle East Quarterly. Yusef Fikri, a Tablighi
member and leader of the Moroccan terrorist organization At-Takfir
wal-Hijrah, was sentenced to death for helping to plan the May 2003
Casablanca bombings that killed 45 people.

“Tablighi Jamaat has always adopted an extreme interpretation of Sunni
Islam,” Alex Alexiev wrote in the Middle East Quarterly, “but in the
past two decades it has radicalized to the point where it is now a
driving force of Islamic extremism and a major recruiting agency for
terrorist causes worldwide.”

Rev. Fawenu recalled the evangelistic event in 2004 that he said is at
the root of recent attacks. The rally by German evangelist Bonnke was to
take place in the heart of the city, he said, but Tibliq-led Muslim
opposition led to the Kwara state government moving the event to a
village miles outside of Ilorin.

“However, two days into the five-day event, the government again brought
the police to stop the event,” he said. “The event was aborted following
opposition from Muslims in the city.”

After the leader of the Tibliq, Dr. Olukade, was injured in the car
crash, he was taken to a hospital in Germany but returned to Nigeria
last November with his condition still critical, Rev. Fawenu said.

“Before his death,” Rev. Fawenu told Compass, “Dr. Olukade was a medical
doctor with the University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital, and was also the
proprietor of TIM Hospital Ilorin.”

Most of the victims of the attacks, he said, have been treated at the
University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital, as well as at the Delink
Hospital in the Oja-iya area of Ilorin.

END

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