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British peer criticizes Nigerian churches in the south for not helping the persecuted north

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Printed Date: 01/17/2017 at 12:16pm


Topic: British peer criticizes Nigerian churches in the south for not helping the persecuted north

Posted By: Ron McGatlin
Subject: British peer criticizes Nigerian churches in the south for not helping the persecuted north
Date Posted: 01/05/2017 at 12:48pm

British peer criticizes Nigerian churches in the south for not helping the persecuted north

Jan 5, 2017 | http://openheaven.s.pronetsweb.com/category/news/" rel="category tag - |

Baroness Caroline Cox, herself, recently narrowly avoided death in northern Nigeria

By Dan Wooding, Founder of ASSIST News Service, who was born in Nigeria

Baroness Cox portrait

LONDON, UK (ANS – January 4, 2017) — Baroness Caroline Cox, 79, a respected Christian member of the British House of Lords, and an important voice in Parliament for religious freedom throughout the world, narrowly avoided death recently from armed Islamist Fulani herdsmen.

She, Bishop Stewart Ruch III, and her team, were visiting Jos Plateau State where the Islamist Fulani cattle herdsmen have become as great a threat as the infamous terror group Boko Haram.

Only thirty minutes after Baroness Cox and her group left the village of Lo Birin, armed men came into the valley, the only way out of the village, and started shooting at vehicles. Local pastor, the Rev. Gyang Boyi, who witnessed the attack, says he believes the attackers were targeting Baroness Cox and her group.

Now safely back in London, the British peer and veteran humanitarian campaigner, has claimed that Christians in the south of Nigeria are failing to help their persecuted compatriots in the north.

Baroness Cox talking with African children

Baroness Cox, who has made numerous aid missions to Nigeria, told World Watch Monitor: “My personal view is that many of those churches are immensely wealthy and I would hope they could do more to help those who are suffering in the north, particularly the internally displaced people who are left.”

“They could work with churches [in the north] who know the needs to reach those most in need.

“From a Christian point of view, St. Paul said that where one part of the Body of Christ suffers, we all suffer. There is an obligation to help our Christian brothers and sisters.”

Fulani herdsmen attacking a Christian village

World Watch Monitor said that the seven-year Islamist rebellion has left 20,000 people dead and about 2.6 million displaced across the four affected countries in West Africa. Many families have been displaced several times.

Baroness Cox said that southern churches had sent occasional consignments of aid, but a tribal rather than national outlook often prevailed resulting in a “disconnect at every level” between Christians in the north and those in the south.

Church leaders in northern Nigeria have previously told World Watch Monitor that they do not have the resources to care for the children orphaned by Islamist militia attacks.

Baroness Cox also voiced concern that the Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari is failing to adequately respond to the increasingly frequent attacks by groups of armed Fulani herdsmen on Christian villages and leaders in the country’s Middle Belt. She suggested that the lack of “robust reprisals” could be linked to him being Fulani.

The Federal Government has pledged to establish cattle ranches to resolve the frequent clashes between herdsmen and farmers, which President Buhari has attributed to “poverty, injustice and the lack of job opportunities”. Other analysts cite climate change and desertification as factors, while ignoring an aspect that researchers such as Open Doors’ Yonas Dembele says amounts to ethnic cleansing of Christians.

Persistent attacks

World Watch Monitor has chronicled persistent attacks in the north

* On December 19, dozens of southern Kaduna indigenes staged a demonstration in Kaduna city to the ongoing killings in their communities.The protesters accused the authorities of not doing enough to stop the violence. They also wanted the whole world to know their plight.

* On Dec. 14 about seven people were killed as Fulani herdsmen raided Kugo village, in Chikun LGA, in Kaduna state. Many others were injured while dozens of houses were set on fire including food stores.

* Since March 2013, at least 180 have been killed and 10,000 displaced, while hundreds of properties, including dozens of churches, have been burnt down,” it said. “Some 16 villages have been overrun by Fulani, who are now fully settled with their cattle and families, according to the Evangelical Church Winning All (ECWA).

ECWA is the main church organization in Kaduna (950 churches, over two million members) and most of the victims were ECWA members.

While there had long been tensions over land for grazing cattle, Baroness Cox describes as a “deeply disturbing strategy” a pattern by armed groups of Fulanis of carrying out violent attacks on Christian villages, shooting dead their pastors and occupying the land, causing the Christian populations to flee.

“Because eye-witnesses reported them shouting ‘Allahu Akbar’ as they carried out their attacks, there’s also an “ideological aspect,” she said. The British Peer said that this is also visible in the way the herdsmen passed through the Sharia-run states in the north without carrying out attacks.

World Watch Monitor continued by saying that in October a security report found that 826 Christians were killed, 878 injured and 21,000 registered displaced as a result of Fulani militia attacks in Nasarawa state alone (in the Middle Belt region) between January 2013 and May 2016.

President Buhari

And in February an estimated 500 people including women, children and the elderly, were slaughtered by armed Fulani in the mainly Christian area of Agatu, in what one leader said was a retaliation for the killing of a prominent Fulani three years earlier.

Asked who was arming the militias, Baroness Cox suggested that while there was much speculation, Boko Haram may have a role in training them, adding: “There’s a lot of concern [the cleansing by Fulani militias is] an extension of the Islamization of Nigeria.”

Asked whether Britain could exert influence through its provision of aid, Cox said she hopes the UK Government would address this issue, in addition to having helped the Nigerian Government combat Boko Haram. However, trying to get aid to Christians displaced by Fulani militias would be difficult, she said. “Very often the aid doesn’t reach the people most in need … they’re dispersed among communities and therefore not in UNHCR camps, and it’s hard to reach them.”

For more information, please go to http://assistnews.us9.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=6241e4f 975144df9aa41202d6&id=936caf76ce&e=15f8bbce9b - .

Baroness Cox with Peter Wooding

Note: My son, Peter Wooding, also recently interviewed Baroness Cox in the House of Lords, and you can read my story about the interview by going to: http://assistnews.us9.list-manage.com/track/click?u=6241e4f9 75144df9aa41202d6&id=ffa00f92ee&e=15f8bbce9b - .

Photo captions: 1) Baroness Caroline Cox. 2) Baroness Cox taking notes in Nigeria. 3) Fulani herdsmen attack a Christian village in northern Nigeria. 4) Nigerian president, Muhammadu Buhari. 5) Peter Wooding interviewing Baroness Cox in the House of Lords. 6) Dan Wooding shortly after his birth at Vom Christian Hospital with his mother, Anne Wooding.

Anne Wooding with baby Dan Wooding at Vom Christian Hospital1

About the writer: Dan Wooding, 76, is an award-winning winning author, broadcaster and journalist who was born in Nigeria, West Africa, of British missionary parents, Alfred and Anne Wooding, who then worked with the Sudan Interior Mission, now known as SIM. He now lives in Southern California with his wife Norma, to whom he has been married for more than 53 years. They have two sons, Andrew and Peter, and six grandchildren who all live in the UK. Dan is the founder/president of the ASSIST News Service (ANS), and is also the author or co-author of some 45 books. He has a weekly radio show and two TV programs all based in Southern California.

** You may republish this or any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service ( http://assistnews.us9.list-manage.com/track/click?u=6241e4f9 75144df9aa41202d6&id=ec42a10080&e=15f8bbce9b - ).

 





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