Over 20 churchgoers, mourners gunned down in Nigeria
A fresh wave of violence targeting Christians claimed by Islamist group Boko Haram has rocked Nigeria, with over 20 people killed in attacks on mourners and church worshippers.
The deadliest of the attacks hit the town of Mubi in northeastern Nigeria on Friday, when five gunmen opened fire on Christian Igbos at a house as they mourned the death of a friend killed in a shooting the night before.
Various death tolls were given. Residents and a relief official reported up to 17 dead, while police said 12 were killed, with between two and five people killed the previous night in the same town. Friday night gunmen raided an area housing churches in Yola city centre, in the same state as Mubi, and killed at least eight people inside a church, according to a local journalist and a hospital source.
On Thursday evening, gunmen had stormed a church in the northeastern city of Gombe and opened fire on worshippers, killing six people including the pastor's wife. The attacks further intensified fears that the violence could lead to wider religious clashes in Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation, which is roughly divided between a mainly Muslim north and predominantly Christian south.
A purported spokesman for Islamist group Boko Haram, blamed for scores of attacks in Nigeria, had on Sunday issued a three-day ultimatum for Christians to leave the north. The same spokesman, Abul Qaqa, claimed responsibility for the attacks at the Mubi church and on the mourners, adding they were in response to the ultimatum.
He also said a state of emergency declared in hard-hit areas last weekend by President Goodluck Jonathan would not stop the sect. "We are responsible for the attacks in Mubi and Gombe," Qaqa, who claims to speak on behalf of Boko Haram, told journalists in the northeastern city of Maiduguri by phone.
"We are extending our frontiers to other places to show that the declaration of a state of emergency by the Nigerian government will not deter us. We can really go to wherever we want to go."
He called on the federal government to release all arrested Boko Haram members as a condition for attacks to stop. "The attacks are part of our response to the ultimatum we gave to southerners to leave the north," he added. Jonathan declared the state of emergency on December 31 in parts of four states hard hit by the attacks blamed on Boko Haram, but there has been no halt to the violence. Yola and Mubi, located in Adamawa state near the Cameroon border, and Gombe are not part of the areas under the state of emergency decree.
Post new comment