Release International report on the humanitarian crisis in north-eastern Nigeria.
A leading Anglican is warning Nigeria's Christians face escalating attacks by Islamist militants in the lead-up to next year's general election. Archbishop Ben Kwashi is calling on the Nigerian government to provide security for Christian farmers in the north, who are being killed and driven from their homes by heavily armed Fulani herdsmen.
The Archbishop has also criticised inaccurate reporting for paralysing the will to intervene to prevent the Fulani attacks.
The Anglican Archbishop of Jos, Benjamin Kwashi, is a partner of UK-based Release International, which supports persecuted Christians around the world. On a speaking tour with Release, the archbishop has called for the Nigerian government to intervene to protect Christians. The Archbishop has himself survived three assassination attempts.
The UN has described the humanitarian crisis in north-eastern Nigeria as 'one of the most severe in the world'. 7.7 million people are now in need of relief aid in the worst-affected states of Borno, Adamawa and Yobe. And the conflict has spilt over into the wider Lake Chad region.
Many of those attacks are being carried out by nomadic Fulani herdsmen, armed with assault rifles. Reports reaching Release International estimate that militants killed 6,000 people in the first six months of 2018 and drove almost 50,000 from their homes. These attacks are growing.
'It's a situation of fear,' said Archbishop Ben Kwashi. 'Most
Christians fear the attacks will get worse in the coming general
elections next year [February 16]. Many, many Christians, especially
in the north, are afraid they might get wiped out.
'The
Federal government of Nigeria has allowed its own citizens to be
decimated by Fulani terrorists without any protection. These killers
have targeted the Christian settlements in the north-east and central
regions of Nigeria. The people they are killing are unarmed Christians
and subsistence farmers, literally the poorest of the poor.'
Archbishop Kwashi has criticised inaccurate reporting
suggesting the conflict is a tit-for-tat clash between two warring
parties - Christian and Muslim. The aggressors, he argues, are the
heavily armed Fulani herdsmen, who are driving Christians from the
north.
'This narrative has provided excuses as to why this
evil has continued for so long. It gives the excuse for Western
governments to do nothing, and for Nigeria's government to provide
only token help, without actually providing security for its people.
It is an unjust government that will allow the poor to be decimated in
this way.
'I want the Nigerian government to rise up to
the truth, to provide security for these poor Christians and protect
them. I'm calling on the Nigerian government to rise up to its
responsibilities and to do so justly.'
The Archbishop also
called for prayer for the Christians of Nigeria: 'It is only through
prayer that these people can be kept alive.'
'These are
the key questions,' says Paul Robinson, the Chief Executive of
Release: 'Just who is arming and training these Fulani militants? And
whose agenda does this killing of mainly Christian communities serve?
'It all points to a strategy to drive out Christians from the north. The government of Nigeria must act now to protect its vulnerable Christian communities.'
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.