Muslim Mobs Burn Down Churches, Pastors'  Homes in Niger for Charlie 
Hebdo's Prophet Muhammad Cartoons; 10 People Dead in  Protests
 
 
(http://www.christianpost.com/news/muslim-mobs-burn-down-churches-pastors-homes-in-niger-for-charlie-hebdos-prophet-muhammad-cartoons-10-people-dead-in
-protests-132757/email.html) 
 
(http://www.christianpost.com/news/muslim-mobs-burn-down-churches-pastors-homes-in-niger-for-charlie-hebdos-prophet-muhammad-cartoons-10-people-dead-in
-protests-132757/print.html) 
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By _Stoyan Zaimov_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/stoyan-zaimov/)   , 
Christian Post Reporter
January 19, 2015|9:24  am
At least 10 people have been killed in violent protests in Niger over the  
weekend, after Muslim mobs burned down a number of churches in retaliation 
to  French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo publishing cartoons depicting the 
Muslim  prophet Muhammad. 
Christian missionaries in the capital, Niamey, told _International 
Christian Concern_ 
(http://www.persecution.org/2015/01/17/muslims-outraged-by-french-publication-ravage-christian-communities-across-africa/)
  that "all of 
[their]  churches have been burned along with the pastors' homes ... almost 
every church  [they] know or are associated with has been attacked." The 
missionaries, who  despite seeing smoke "around all sides of [their] house," 
remain 
in Niamey. 
"Jesus said: 'I will build my church and the gates of hell will not prevail 
 against it.' We are confident that this persecution will only grow the 
church  and the Gospel in Niger," the missionaries  continued.





 
 
Charlie Hebdo, which suffered a terror attack earlier in January on its  
offices in Paris, where 12 people were killed, is a secular publication that 
has  _targeted different religions, including Christianity_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/news/holy-trinity-portrayed-in-sodomy-jesus-labeled-as-child-of-
sin-charlie-hebdo-issues-that-led-to-christian-lawsuits-132514/) . There is 
 no information about if and how the churches in Niger that were burned 
down  could have been connected to the newspaper. 
_Al Jazeera_ 
(http://www.aljazeera.com/news/africa/2015/01/toll-rises-anti-cartoon-riots-niger-201511813282440563.html)
  reported that the violent 
demonstrations took  place in Nioamey, and at least five people on Saturday 
died 
inside churches and  bars that were set on fire. Another five people are 
reported to have died on  Friday. 
The protests apparently began at Niamey's grand mosque, _BBC  News_ 
(http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-30863159)  said, and at least six 
churches 
were burned down in the  attack. 
Pastor Zakaria Jadi, who runs one of the churches burnt down in the attack, 
 said that he was in a meeting with other church elders when he heard of 
the  riots. 
"I just rushed and told my colleagues in the church to take away their  
families from the place," Jadi said. "I took my family to take them out from 
the  place. When I came back I just discovered that everything has gone. 
There's  nothing in my house and also in the church." 
Charlie Hebdo's decision to _feature  a drawing_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/news/charlie-hebdo-to-feature-muhammad-on-front-cover-of-first-edition-si
nce-paris-massacre-132501/)  of Muhammad in its first cover last week 
following the Paris  attack caused much debate. While mass crowds across France 
have stood behind the  magazine's freedom of speech, some, like Salah-Aldeen 
Khadr, executive producer  of Al Jazeera English, suggested that the 
decision will only further increase  tensions. 
"You don't actually stick it to the terrorists by insulting the majority of 
 Muslims by reproducing more cartoons — you actually entrench the very 
animosity  and divisions these guys seek to sow," Khadr said. 
Niger's President Mahamadou Issoufou was one of 40 world leaders to march 
in  Paris last Sunday in unity against terrorism. Issoufou condemned the 
violence  against Christian churches in Niger, which is a predominantly Muslim 
nation. 
"Those who loot these places of worship, who desecrate them and kill their  
Christian compatriots ... have understood nothing of Islam," the president  
said. 
ICC noted that Niger has attracted a growing radical sentiment in recent  
times. Boko Haram leader, Abubakar Shekau, was born in Niger, and his sermons 
 against Christians calling on Muslim men to join a global jihad can be 
heard at  mosques across the country. 
Cameron Thomas, ICC's regional manager for Africa said: "Communities across 
 the Islamic world, outraged by the satirical magazine's depictions of 
Muslims  and the prophet Muhammed, have formed into violent mobs and taken to 
burning  churches and Christian homes and businesses. In response, Christians 
in Niger,  Mali, Sudan and Somalia have fallen into states of panic and, in 
many cases,  have fled their homes for shelter from possible attack in 
response to the  publication's decision to confront issues of Islamic extremism 
with  cartoons." 
Thomas added: "Christians in Muslim-majority countries hostile to even the  
practice, let alone the spread, of Christianity face incredible hardship 
for  their faith that is often made worse by seemingly unconnected actions in 
the  Western world. Over the course of these riots, dozens of churches and 
Christian  businesses and homes will burn for a cause unconnected to 
themselves. Our  thoughts and prayers go out to those who have lost property 
and 
loved ones in  the violence, with the hope that no more innocent lives will 
fall victim to the  violence or destruction that was sparked last week on the 
streets of Paris and  has now spilled over onto the streets of Niamey, more 
than 2,000 miles  away."

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