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http://www.rightsidenews.com/2013090733159/world/terrorism/armed-muslims-in-nigeria-kill-christians-in-their-homes.html
 Armed Muslims in Nigeria Kill Christians in their
Homes<http://www.rightsidenews.com/2013090733159/world/terrorism/armed-muslims-in-nigeria-kill-christians-in-their-homes.html>
Published
on Saturday, 07 September 2013 06:48 Written by Morning Star News


Ethnic Fulani herdsmen attack villages on Kaduna/Plateau state border.

*ADU, Nigeria *(Morning Star News) – Gabriel Anthony, 25, was steeped in
quiet, prayerful devotion at 5 a.m. on Sunday (Sept. 1) in this northern
Nigerian village when he heard gunshots.

“Within minutes, bullets were piercing into our rooms,” Anthony told
Morning Star News. “I escaped from my room by jumping through the window.”

A half hour later, seven of his relatives in Adu village, Kaduna state,
were dead, including his father, 60-year-old Anthony Nkom (*photo right*);
his mother, 45-year-old Asabe Anthony; his brother, 35-year-old James
Anthony; and another brother, 37-year-old Andrew Anthony. Also killed were
three of his nephews – 5-year-old Meshack Aaron, 12-year-old Bulus James
Anthony, and 15-year-old Happiness Anthony.

The bodies of Happiness and Meshack were buried in one grave, and those of
the other five in another.

**

Besides these seven people, two other Christians in the village were killed
and three were wounded in the attack by more than a dozen ethnic Fulani
Muslims, Anthony said. All of those killed were members of the St. Andrew’s
Catholic Church in Adu.

As Anthony’s relatives were being shot, in another part of Adu village
another set of Muslim Fulani gunmen attacked the house of Joseph Abwoi, 50,
killing him and his wife, Asabat Abwoi, 40. They were buried in a single
grave.

The three people wounded in the attack on Anthony’s home were grandchildren
of the murdered Nkom – Godiya Andrew, 9; Shenyan Andrew, 3; and Kawot, 5,
he said.

While Godiya was being treated for gunshot wounds at the Jos University
Teaching Hospital, Kawot was taken to Kafanchan General Hospital and
Shenyan was receiving treatment at the Rural Hospital Kaura in Kaduna
state, Anthony said.

“By the time the Fulani gunmen had moved to other houses in the village,
the sounds of gunshots had forced the over 500 inhabitants of the village
to flee into the bushes, thus escaping from being killed,” he said.

Survivors fled to the town of Manchok in Kaura LGA of Kaduna state, he
said.

Armed Fulani herdsmen had attacked villages in the same area on the border
of two states – Attakar in the Kaura Local Government Area (LGA) of Kaduna
state, and Riyom LGA in Plateau state – in a four-day Easter assault March
28-31 that killed at least 26 Christians (see Morning Star
News<http://morningstarnews.org/2013/04/nigerian-pastor-family-narrowly-escape-villages-easter-carnage/>,
April 5).

The Easter violence had prompted talks between Fulani leaders and area
Christians of other tribes to try to determine why the Muslims had attacked
and how to bring an end to the aggression. The Rev. Yakubu Gandu Nkut,
pastor of the Evangelical Church Winning All (ECWA), Zankan, said he was
thus baffled about possible reasons for Sunday’s attack.

“I don’t understand the reasons behind these attacks on our people by these
Fulani herdsmen,” he said. “Several meetings have been held with their
leaders in order to resolve whatever are the differences. However, in spite
of promises by these Fulani leaders that these attacks will not occur
again, we have continued to witness these beastly attacks.”

The violence is undermining the work of various area churches, he said.

“As you are here, you can see that my family is not here in this village,”
Nkut said. “The reason is because since Sunday, these Muslim Fulani
herdsmen have been attacking Christian villages around here. On Monday up
to yesterday [Sept. 4], some of the Muslim gunmen were here to attack this
community, but they were repelled by the people. And because of this,
almost everybody has left the village.”

Nkut said there has never been a time when area Christians attacked the
Fulani. Christians believe Islamic extremist groups have increasingly
incited Fulani Muslims to attack Christians in Kaduna and Plateau states as
well as in Bauchi, Nasarawa and Benue. They fear that Fulani herdsmen, with
backing from Islamic extremist groups, want to take over the predominantly
Christian areas in order to acquire land for grazing, stockpile arms and
expand Islamic territory.

Nkut, chairman of the Zankan chapter of the Christian Association of
Nigeria, appealed to the government to take urgent action to stop the
attacks.

*Coma*

Islamic extremists from outside of Nigeria paid to join forces with Fulani
Muslims the prior Friday, Aug. 30, attacked another village in Plateau
state that left a Christian in a coma, area Christians said.

The mercenaries, whose appearance and speech suggested they were from
outside the country, joined with Fulani Muslims to attack church property
in Dorowa Babuje, also known as Ratatis, they said. The assailants beat
John Fidelis, 40, a Christian merchant, until he was unconscious.

The Rev. Luka Jang Tsok told Morning Star News he narrowly escaped death
when the armed Fulani Muslims and mercenaries set fire to his Church of
Christ in Nations (COCIN) building in the village, in the Barkin Ladi LGA.
The village is about 140 kilometers (86 miles) from Adu in neighboring
Kaduna state.

“I had to sneak out of the church compound by jumping over the fence to
save my life,” Tsok said. “During the attack, the Muslim men and Fulanis,
who were armed, set fire on the church, but the efforts of some of my
church members, who had to ensure that all the entry gates to the compound
were well locked, saved the church building from being burnt.”

In the two-hour attack that began about 2 p.m., 17 shops and three houses
belonging to Christians were looted and damaged, he said.

“There is a need for a sustained security surveillance of this area,
because with the way things are going, we fear that there is a great danger
ahead,” Tsok said.

Rufai Ozokwo, a 40-year-old Christian who owns a shop in Dorowa Babuje,
told Morning Star News by phone that his shop was looted.

“I was in the shop when suddenly we started hearing gunshots, and quickly I
had to lock the shop and run away,” he said. “But when everything settled,
I came back to find a hole that was dug through the wall of my shop, and
when I checked, my television, generator, some provisions and money were
taken away.”

Ozokwo said a Christian from the Yoruba ethnic group who has a store in the
village also had his shop looted.

“We, the Christians in this village, were all attacked,” Ozokwo said.
“Another Christian who is an Igbo man with a shop here was also attacked
and his shop looted.”

In previous attacks, Muslim extremist mercenaries were suspected to have
come from Chad, Niger and Cameroon. There has been no government statement
about the affiliation of these mercenaries to terrorist groups, but a few
days before the Aug. 30 attack, the governor of Plateau state referred to
outside extremists wreaking havoc in Nigeria.

“Had Nigerians listened to the cries and complaints of Plateau state over
the involvement of foreigners in the crises in the state and addressed the
situation, the insurgence in the north and other parts of the country would
have been nipped in the bud,” Gov. Jonah David Jang reportedly told Martins
Brian, Charge D’ Affairs of the American Embassy in Nigeria, who visited
the governor in his Jos office. “Our cries on many occasions as regards the
involvement of foreign mercenaries in the crises in the state were
dismissed as sentiment until other states in the north started having
similar experience.”

Jang urged the U.S. government to help contain the crisis.

“When we started reporting about foreigners getting involved in the crises
here, no one believed us,” he said. “I have been vindicated; what we were
trying to stop here escalated and developed into [Islamic extremist
terrorist group] Boko Haram, which some parts of the north are suffering
today.”

Brian reportedly responded that the United States was interested in peace
in Nigeria and was ready to assist the country to achieve peace.


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