NIGERIAN PASTOR, 16 WORSHIPERS KIDNAPPED BY GUNMEN WHO STORMED CHOIR PRACTICE
Nigerian Pastor, 16
Worshipers Kidnapped By Gunmen Who Stormed Choir Practice
An evangelical pastor,
his daughter, and more than a dozen other churchgoers were reportedly abducted
while one person was killed after a team of gunmen attacked villages in the
troubled Kaduna state of Nigeria on Sunday.
According to Nnamdi
Obasi of the International Crisis Group, Rev. Zakariah Ido, 11 girls and five
men were abducted from an Evangelical Church Winning All congregation in the
village of Dankande in the Birnin Gwari local government area in the early
hours of Sunday morning.
He tweeted that sources claimed that as many as 20
gunmen were responsible for the attack.
The Nigerian online
newspaper TheCable reported that the
gunmen also impacted a village in the Igabi local government area of Kaduna.
“It was at about 12:30
midnight. We had combined choir practice in the church with other neighboring
communities. We normally hold the combine choir practice from 9:00 p.m. to 1:00
a.m,” an unnamed witness told The Cable about the church attack in Dankande.
The source explained
that the armed men surrounded the church and began shooting.
“Everybody was terrified
but there was no how we could run because they had already surrounded the
church,” the witness explained.
According to The Nation,
among those abducted at the church are pastor Ido’s daughter and the son of an
Assemblies of God pastor.
Pastor Nath Waziri, the
district church council secretary, told The Nation that the gunmen asked
everyone at the church to surrender their phones and demanded to know who the
pastor was.
“After threatening the
choristers they became afraid and showed them the pastor home,” Wazir was
quoted as saying. “They took him away and his daughter with 15 others amongst
which there is the son of the pastor of Assemblies of God Church.”
The Evangelical Church
Winning All is one of the country’s largest Christian denominations with over
6,000 congregations.
While it hasn’t been
confirmed who is responsible for the attack and abduction, ThisDaynewspaper spoke with an
eyewitness who claimed that 30 Fulani extremists armed with guns and machetes
were responsible for the attack in the village of Guguwa-Kwate in Igabi local
government area.
”We are helpless because
there is nothing we can do other than to report to the police when such
incidents happened,” the eyewitness said. “We have no arms and we cannot stand
them, we are just at their mercy because they are well armed and they always
come in large numbers.”
The witness detailed how
his nephew was killed by the gunmen during an attack on a home.
“They entered one house
and were beating people,” the source said. “They kidnapped one man and a woman
in the house.”
The witness added that
it was the fifth time that gunmen had invaded their community.
“About two months ago,
they abducted two people in the farm,” the witness said. “The other person was
killed even after we paid them ransom.”
Christian farming
communities throughout the middle belt of Nigeria have faced increasing attacks at the hands of Fulani extremists over the last couple of years
with thousands being killed and countless homes and churches being destroyed.
In the last several
months, the Kaduna state has been hit hard with Fulani
violence. In March, the governor had to institute a dusk-to-dawn curfew.
While farmer-herder
conflicts in the Middle Belt are nothing new, Christians in Nigeria say that
the Fulani attacks have escalated in brutality and taken on a religious element
in recent years.
“It is really
simplifying catastrophic incidents in Nigeria by saying ‘herder-farmer
conflict’ and that does not solve the problem,” Stephen Enada, who co-founded
the nongovernmental organization
International Committee on Nigeria, told CP in March. “We need
to face reality on the ground and call a spade a spade. In Southern Kaduna, a
village is almost wiped out and over 200 people have been killed in the last
week.”
The U.S. Commission on
International Religious Freedom has recommended that the State Department
designate Nigeria a “country of particular concern" for religious freedom
violations.
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