CHRISTIANS SEEK REFUGE AFTER SERIES OF JIHADIST ATTACKS
Christians Seek Refuge After Series Of Jihadist
Attacks
Concerned about a rise in violence against Christians in Burkina
Faso, Pastor Jacques Ouedraogo changed the time of his Sunday service as a
precaution. He believes this is what saved his life.
Later, his church was one of two
targeted by gunmen on May 12 in the town of Dablo in a series of deadly attacks
on churches and a religious procession in the last two weeks in Burkina’s
formerly peaceful Central North region.
“I could have been one of the martyrs
who fell on Sunday,” said the priest.
“We’ve told ourselves our turn will
come. Today Christians are potential targets. We’re all scared.”
In the wake of Sunday’s bloodshed, he
and hundreds of residents fled Dablo. The town had previously served as a safe
haven for some of the thousands displaced by violence in the country’s northern
Sahel region, which has become a stronghold for militant groups with links to
Islamic State and al Qaeda.
Around 90 kilometres south of Dablo, the
city of Kaya has become a refuge for those newly displaced, including a farmer,
who asked to be identified by the name Te Wende. Along with his wife, mother,
grandmother and two children, he was warned by neighbors to flee.
“When the shooting started, they called
us straight away and told us to run far away,” he said.
“We don’t know where they came from or
what they really wanted,” he said.
On Thursday, the United Nations warned
that the Central North region had become the new epicentre for attacks.
The recent targeting of churches
threatens to upend traditionally peaceful relations between the Muslim majority
and Christians, who make up a quarter of Burkinabes.
“I call on Christians not to panic and
not to yield to the temptation of vengeance, because that could be blind,” the
Bishop of Kaya, Theophile Nare, said at a meeting of bishops in the capital on
Friday.
The first church attack occurred in late
April, when gunmen killed a Protestant pastor and five congregants.
Subsequently, a Catholic priest and five parishioners were killed in the Dablo
attack and a further four Catholics died in an attack on Tuesday.
No one has claimed responsibility, but
the Burkinabe government has blamed “terrorist groups … attacking religion with
the macabre aim of dividing us.”
Violent attacks linked to the
strengthening jihadist insurgency have surged this year in Burkina as well as
across the broader Sahel region, an arid expanse of scrubland just south of the
Sahara desert.
Militants have also worked to sow ethnic
tensions between farming and herding communities in Mali, Burkina Faso and
Niger in order to boost recruitment among marginalised communities.
On Thursday, Islamic State’s West
African branch claimed responsibility for an ambush that killed 28 soldiers
this week in Niger, one of the deadliest attacks against the military in
Niger’s west in recent years.
No comments