A leader of Ekklesiyar Yan’uwa a Nigeria (EYN--the Church of the
Brethren in Nigeria) has sent an e-mail report on recent violence in
Nigeria. Also, a new Christian and Muslim alliance committed to solving
tensions in Nigeria has been announced by the World Council of Churches
(see “In related news” below).
The church leader’s report from the area around the central Nigerian
city of Jos focused mainly on attacks on nearby villages earlier this
month. He did not say the most recent violence has affected EYN churches
or members.
A number of villages near Jos were attacked by gunmen. During a mass
burial of the people who had been killed, another attack by gunmen on
July 8 killed government officials including a senator and a house of
assembly member, among other people. Also a member of the house of
representatives was injured and hospitalized.
“This gave a record of the first time when top government officials
were killed in ethnic, religious, and political or socio-economic
violence in Nigeria,” the church leader wrote.
On July 13 a suicide bomber failed in an attempt targeting government
officials in the northeastern city of Maiduguri. “In this attack five
people died including the suicide bomber,” the church leader wrote. “The
police reported that the Emir and the deputy governor escaped death
just some meters from where the explosion started.”
On July 16, gun shots and explosions rocked Damaturu, the state
capital of Yobe State. Since then, an explosion at an Islamic school
located in Bukuru, near Jos, killed at least one student and broke down
walls at the school.
In addition, Nigerian media has reported difficulties in getting food
and relief supplies to refugees from the villages that were attacked,
who have been living in camps. The media reports seem to indicate most
of the recent violence around Jos likely stems from inter-ethnic
conflict, although some days later the Islamist sect Boko Haram claimed
responsibility.
The church leader expressed frustration that “since the crisis has so
many heads (folds) true interpretation...will always have a different
meaning for the opposite faith.”
He also sent thanks for the prayers of American Brethren. “We want to thank you all for your prayers always,” he wrote.
In
related news, the World Council of Churches (WCC) and the Royal Aal
Al-Bayt Institute for Islamic Thought (RABIIT) sent a high-level
interreligious delegation to the Nigerian cities of Abuja, Jos, and
Kaduna in May. The delegation’s report discusses complex reasons behind
the violence, suggesting that it goes beyond religion and is rooted in a
matrix of political, social, ethnic, economic, and legal problems. “The
issue of justice--or the lack of it--looms large as a common factor,”
said Prince Ghazi bin Muhammad of Jordan, chairman of the RABIIT. The
delegation also expressed admiration for the vast majority of Nigerians
who do not want their religion to be used to propagate violence.
Read the full text of the “Report on the inter-religious tensions and crisis in Nigeria” at www.oikoumene.org/en/resources/documents/wcc-programmes/interreligious-dialogue-and-cooperation/accompanying-churches-in-conflict-situations/report-on-the-inter-religious-tensions-in-nigeria.html.
Source:7/26/2012 Newsline
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