In Nigeria, deadly violence hits faithful at Mass
Tuesday, August 8, 2017
"This attack is terribly inhuman and barbaric and we condemn the killings wholeheartedly."
By ACN staff
ARMED thugs drove their vehicle onto a parish compound early
Sunday Aug 6, 2017, entered the church where faithful were gathered for 6AM
Mass and opened fire. The target was a drug lord, who was absent. Instead, thirteen
innocent worshippers were killed and 26 were gravely wounded among hundreds
present.
The bloody incident took place in the Church of St. Philippe
in the town of Ozubulu, Anambra State, in southern Nigeria.
Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Parolin sent a
telegram to the local ordinary, Bishop Hilary Paoul Odili Okeke of Nnewi,
conveying Pope Francis’s condolences. The message said that the Pope was “deeply
saddened” for the victims of the “violent attack.”
Bishop Okeke, who read the telegram to the congregation at
Mass in St. Philippe’s Church the day after the killings, told international
Catholic papal agency Aid to the Church in Need (ACN) that his faithful were “deeply
touched by the gesture of the Pope to comfort them at such a tragic time.”
Archbishop Ignatius Kaigama of Jos, president of the
Nigerian bishops’ conference, told Vatican Radio that “this attack is terribly
inhuman and barbaric and we condemn the killings wholeheartedly.”
Tribal conflict fueled and worsened by drug trafficking has
held a grip on Ozubulu and other towns in Anambra State. It is another dimension
of the endemic hardships besetting a country struggling with poverty,
corruption at all levels of society, the aftermath of the reign of Islamist
terror in northeastern Nigeria and ongoing jihadist aggression against
Christians in the country’s north and so-called Middle Belt.
“Aid to the Church in Need condemns in the strongest possible
terms any attack that takes place in a house of worship,” said Edward Clancy, ACNUSA
director of outreach, “and we join the Pope in solidarity and prayer for the
victims of this senseless violence.” He added: “The Nigerian Church’s
overriding objective is to create a culture of peace, a culture of life—its mission
is to heal and protect all citizens.”
“Despite these attacks, Catholics in Nigeria will continue
to be strong and committed Christians,” said Archbishop Kaigama. He concluded: “We
urge them to be ready and willing to continue to show their commitment to Jesus
through a life of witness.”
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