Release launches petition urging Nigeria to protect Christians under attack
As international outrage builds following the abduction of more than
200 Nigerian school girls Release International launches a new
campaign to protect Nigerian Christians from extremist violence. The
petition also calls on Nigeria to root out rogue elements in its
security forces.
Release International, which serves the
persecuted Church worldwide, has launched a campaign to press Nigeria
to step up security. It calls on the government to protect its
Christian citizens who are coming under increasing attack.
Islamist terror group Boko Haram has finally claimed responsibility
for kidnapping hundreds of school girls in Borno State on April 14.
Armed gunmen posing as soldiers abducted around 276 schoolgirls from
Chibok, a mainly Christian area of northern Nigeria. According to the
police, 223 are still missing.
In a video made all the more chilling by his laughter, the group's leader Abubakar Shekau told the world: 'I abducted your girls. I will sell them in the market, by Allah. There is a market for selling humans. Allah says I should sell. He commands me to sell.'
Boko Haram has also claimed responsibility for planting a car bomb in the capital Abuja, last Friday, killing 19. They set the bomb to go off within yards of a recent blast that killed at least 70.
Boko Haram's stated aim is to impose Taliban-style Sharia law across
the whole of Nigeria. Their full name is Jamāʻat Ahl
as-Sunnah lid-daʻwa wal-Jihād, which translates as
the Congregation of the People of Tradition for Proselytism and Jihad.
To that end, the group has declared war against both the
government and Christians. They are more commonly known by their
nickname, Boko Haram, which means 'Western education is forbidden.'
'Let's not forget that Boko Haram intends to set up an
Islamic state,' says Release Chief Executive Paul Robinson, who adds:
'The religious dimension to this insurgency is often notably absent
from media coverage.
'But when you have an AK47 pointed in your face and asked whether you are a Christian, that shows there is a fundamental religious aspect to this violence.
'Time and again we interview Christians who have lost loved ones at the hands of Boko Haram and it is very clear they have been targeted because they are Christian. When the Northern States Christian and Elders Forum released the names of 180 of the abducted girls, it showed that 165 were from Christian homes.'
According to CNN, Boko Haram boasted a year ago that it intended to abduct and sell girls. The Chibok abductions, while largest in scale, are neither Boko Haram's first nor their most recent kidnappings.
Last November, Boko Haram seized dozens of Christian women in
Maiduguri, Borno State. When the military managed to rescue the women,
some were pregnant, others had been married off against their wills
and forcibly converted to Islam.
According to Human Rights
Watch, Boko Haram went on to abduct 25 women and girls in the first
two months of 2014, before staging their most audacious raid in
Chibok, where hundreds of girls, aged mainly between 16 and 18, were
sitting their exams.
Some observers fear the girls may already have been smuggled across
the porous borders into Chad and Cameroon to be sold for sex, or
forcibly married and converted to Islam.
According to
press reports, eight more girls, aged between 12 and 15, were abducted
on Sunday night in Warabe village, Borno state.
Boko
Haram is not the only threat facing Nigerian Christians. Minority
communities have been attacked in the north in a programme of
religious and ethnic cleansing.
And attacks have been
spreading further south, as villagers come under armed assault from
well-armed Fulani militants. The Christian villagers tell their
stories in the latest edition of Release magazine, which is available
for download. At a conservative estimate, thousands of Christians have
been killed and driven from their homes.
There are ongoing
reports that the Islamist militants in Nigeria are being supported by
jihadis and mercenaries from Niger, Chad and Cameroon. And there are
frequent accounts that security forces, who have been drafted in to
protect Christian villagers, are instead collaborating with the
attackers.
Observers believe the militants are attempting
to destabilise Nigeria ahead of the presidential elections in 2015.
Release International's No More Sorrow! campaign implores the Nigerian government to 'take immediate, decisive and comprehensive measures, while there is still time, to provide effective protection to these vulnerable people.' And it calls for Nigeria to 'root out elements in the security forces that are either ineffective or even complicit in the violence.'
Details of the campaign and petition forms are available from the Release International website: www.releaseinternational.org Release will present the petition to the Nigerian High Commissioner in London.
The opinions expressed in this article are not necessarily those held by Cross Rhythms. Any expressed views were accurate at the time of publishing but may or may not reflect the views of the individuals concerned at a later date.