In Nigeria, Fulani herdsmen are new Islamist terror threat to Christians
Wednesday, December 21, 2016
"53 villages burned down, 808 people murdered and 57 wounded, 1,422 houses and 16 churches destroyed."
By Maria Lozano
NEW YORK—Islamist
violence and terrorism has killed more than 12,000 Christians in Nigeria,
destroying some 2,000 churches. Boko Haram has perpetrated the bulk of the
killings, but in the past year a new source of Islamist terror has hit the
country in the form of the Fulani Herdsmen Terrorists (FHT).
In just the last three months, the group—drawn
from the rank of the nomadic Fulani people—has swept across half of Kaduna
State, in northern Nigeria, a local bishop told international Catholic charity
Aid to the Church in Need.
Bishop Joseph Bagobiri of the Diocese of
Kafanchan gave an accounting of attacks in his area since September 2016: “53
villages burned down, 808 people murdered and 57 wounded, 1,422 houses and 16
churches destroyed.” Though little know in the West, FHT is becoming a huge
menace to Christians and moderate Muslims alike.
Historically, there have been sporadic
conflicts between Fulani herdsmen and farmers fighting over land, but Fulani herdsmen,
the bishop said, are now using “sophisticated weapons they didn’t have before,
such as AK-47s of unknown provenance.”
He added: “In addition to the social and
economic that have fueled conflict since ancient times, such as the
distribution of the land and shortage of grazing, the dimension of the problem
has changed.
"The Fulani are Muslim and the land they are attacking belongs
mainly to ethnic groups that are Christian; now there is religious hatred
driving the violence.” Fulani aggression, the bishop said, “has turned into
religious persecution.”

The prelate said that in many of the
villages that have been attacked especially the small businesses owned by
Christians as well as churches that have been singled out for destruction. He added:
“Nor can it be said that the violence is directed against a particular ethnic
group, since the Christians belong to various different ethnic groups.”
Bishop Bagobiri expressed dismay that “the persecution of Christians in
Nigeria is not given anything like the same level of international attention”
as the plight of Christians in the Middle East.
Even the Nigerian government,
he charged, is not paying enough attention: “the attacks on Christians meet
with seeming indifference on the part of the country’s leadership—either the
police do not have the appropriate weaponry to intervene, or else they have not
been given orders to do so.”
Bishop Bagobiri expressed his conviction
that this new terrorist threat reflects the growth of of Islamic fundamentalism
Nigeria, in particular the imposition of sharia law, which has now been
introduced into 12 of the 36 states of Nigeria, including Kaduna State.
Sharia
law, the bishop charged, is the source of “inequality and discrimination. For
example, Islamic courts frequently set free Muslims who have committed crimes,
such as the murder of Christians whom they have accused of blasphemy.”
Children in the Diocese of Kaduna; ACN photo
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