President of Christian Welfare Initiative (CWI), who doubles as the
chairman of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), South-west Zone,
Archbishop Magnus Atilade, had recently urged Christians to join in the
31-day fasting and prayers programme for the persecuted Church in
Nigeria which started on January 14, noting that
denominations/ministries which had begun fasting and prayers programme
in this season should add the prayers for the persecuted Church to their
prayer schedules in addition to praying against any Islamic agenda.
Atilade maintained that Christians should use the period to draw
attention of the entire country, as well as other nations of the world,
to the growing security threats to Christians in the Federal Republic of
Nigeria.
“We affirm that Nigeria is a secular society in which all the
citizens have free right to live, work, and express their faith
according to their individual convictions. If the secularity of Nigeria
has in any way been reviewed or modified, we are not aware,” he stated,
adding that the Nigerian Constitution guarantees freedom of speech,
freedom of movement, and the right to worship God according to
individual conviction,” Atilade stated.
“We are however disturbed, and very alarmed, at the rate and
consistency with which Christians are being slaughtered in northern
Nigeria, in a manner similar to the genocide in Rwanda. The brutality,
cruelty and inhuman manner in which Nigerian Christians are being
systematically and consistently slaughtered by individuals claiming to
be adherents of the Islamic faith has reached an alarming proportion
that we are compelled to speak out. THIS IS INHUMAN!
“In the northern parts of the country, these individuals and groups
of individuals have been operating for years with impunity and without
regard for law and order, or respect for the right of other Nigerians to
live and express their faith in God according to their choice.”
According to Atilade, the Fulani herdsmen are fast becoming notorious
as a harbinger of destruction wherever they lead their cattle to, in
the Middle Belt, South-west and in the South-east. He also outlined
several instances since March 2010 when the militant Islamic sect, Boko
Haram, had caused mayhem all over the North killing Christians and
destroying properties.
“It is quite amazing that these Fulani herdsmen are yet to be
convicted of mass murder. It is equally disheartening that even moderate
Muslims that do not seem to support these agents of death and
destruction are also targeted and killed by members of the Boko Haram
terrorist group. It is very unfortunate that innocent students are also
massacred by these terrorists,” the CAN leader stated.
“While attacks have been reported against moderate Muslims that do
not support these insurgents, it is clear to the whole world that the
main target of these terrorist attacks by both Boko Haram and the Fulani
herdsmen are Christians in Nigeria.
“While some mischievous elements in the media have attempted
portraying these killings as ethnic or socio-economic related clashes,
the pattern of the attacks confirm that it is a religious war, patterned
after the Islamic Jihad. According to the World Watch List, The
majority of the incidents of conflicts that have been reported in the
international media as ‘clashes’ between Muslims and Christians in
actual fact have been one-sided violence against Christians.”
Continuing, he said as a result of these crises, thousands of
Christian men, women and children have been murdered, thousands of
children have become orphans, thousands of women are widowed, while
innumerable Christian men and women have been maimed and mutilated.
“It is unbelievable that in this age and period, human beings could
descend to such level of inhuman barbarity and cruelty while claiming
divine mandate. Nigerian citizens have been hacked to death with
machete, their throats have been slit with knives like rams, their heads
have been severed from their necks with the saw carpenters use on wood,
the barrel of AK 47 has been placed on their nose before being fired,
the stomach of pregnant women were ripped open with knives, they have
been burnt alive, and all manners of unprintable atrocities have been
committed by some Nigerian citizens against other Nigerian citizens all
in the name of expanding a religion,” he stated.
“In Borno, Yobe, Adamawa, Plateau, Benue, Bauchi, Kogi, Niger,
Nassarawa, Taraba, Kano, Kaduna, Gombe states as well as the Federal
Capital Territory, individuals and groups of individuals, claiming
Islamic injunction, have been routinely killing, bombing, maiming and
mutilating Christians. Properties of Christians are being destroyed and
their places of worship as well as business locations are routinely
burnt and destroyed.
“The situation reached a crescendo that the Federal Government was
compelled to impose a state of emergency in the states of Borno, Yobe,
and Adamawa on May 14, 2013.
“Despite the emergency rule, the Islamic terrorists did not relent in their attacks.”.
Atilade maintained that the 2013 World Watch List report showed that
66% of Christians killed, globally, were Nigerian Christians.
Wondering why there is a conspiracy of silence over the emerging
religious war in Nigeria, the archbishop attempted to give reasons why
the situation persists, noting that what is more distressing is the
valid information that the incessant bloodshed is a culmination of a
carefully planned agenda to turn Nigeria into an Islamic state and
Africa as an Islamic continent.
Members of the Boko Haram, he argued, have clearly announced that
their objective is to Islamize Nigeria. “We are aware that a meeting was
held many years ago to strategize on Islamizing Africa in general and
Nigeria in particular. We are also aware that eradication of Christian
groups resistant to Islamic conversion was advocated in a conference
held in Abuja in 1989. That Islamic agenda is unfolding before our eyes
today,” the archbishop said.
“We wish to use this medium to alert Christians in Nigeria,
particularly in the South-west, that there is an Islamic agenda that has
been launched against Nigeria, and the trend of events seems to point
in the direction of the South-west as the next battle ground. There
seems to be a gradual plot to make Islam the dominant religion in the
region.
“We cannot understand why the political party that is currently
ruling in the South-west fielded mostly Muslims as its governorship
candidates. 80 per cent of the governors of this political party in the
South-west are Muslims. It is a gross imbalance that must be redressed
without delay.
“To add to our apprehension, Osun State Gov. Rauf Aregbesola has
commenced taking decisions and introducing policies that are clearly
anti-Christian.
“Osun State under Gov. Aregbesola is not hiding its intolerance and
disdain for the Christian faith. Recently, as a direct result of his
policies, a Christian secondary school in Osun was invaded by Muslims
and the principal was nearly beaten into a state of coma. It is by a
stroke of divine intervention that he did not die.
To date, we are yet to witness the prosecution of the Muslims who perpetrated that dastardly act.
To date, we are yet to witness the prosecution of the Muslims who perpetrated that dastardly act.
“Christians in Nigeria should be warned not to underestimate the
unfolding Islamic agenda in the country. Historically, nations like
Turkey, Egypt, Algeria, and so on, were Christian nations before they
were overran by Islam. Not only were they overrun by Islam, their
culture and governance were taken over by Arabs. If a nation like Turkey
could be Islamized, Christians in Nigeria should not assume that the
Islamization agenda is an idle threat.”
He therefore advised Christians in the South-west, who have concluded
that the region is immune to such attacks, to study carefully what is
unfolding in Osun, noting that “developments in Osun State clearly
confirm that there is cause for concern.”
“We wish to state clearly that those of us who are Christians in
Nigeria shall not renounce Christianity, and neither shall we convert to
Islam. We are Christians by choice, and we choose to remain Christians.
We are persuaded that no human being needs to be forced or coerced to
accept a gift. A gift that comes with a sword as an alternative is a
questionable gift. It is a suspicious gift. Every gift speaks for itself
and forceful persuasion becomes unnecessary,” the CAN leader stated.
On politics of religion, Atilade observed that it is worrisome that
religion is gradually becoming the defining factor in politics in the
country.
“We are also disturbed by the consistent intensity with which Muslim
politicians seek to destabilize the government of President Goodluck
Jonathan. We clearly remember that before his election, certain Muslim
politicians threatened to make Nigeria ungovernable for him should he
exercise his constitutional right of seeking election as the president
of Nigeria. Events that have unfolded after his election, starting with
the post-election violence in 2011, proved that it was not an idle
threat,” he stressed.
“We appeal to our fellow Muslim citizens that are determined to cause
problem in the nation, that Nigeria belongs to both Christians and
Muslims. Every Nigerian has the constitutional right to seek elective
office and no one should be harassed or intimidated for doing so. In
addition, we are observing the emergence of political gatherings with
conflicting signals about its religious intent.
“As Christians, we welcome an all-inclusive political party that will
protect the interests of all Nigerian citizens, irrespective of tribe,
religion, or social status.
“The unfortunate religious persecution in the northern parts of
Nigeria is an eye-opener and calls for caution in establishing political
associations. The current imbalance in the religious structure in the
North of Nigeria that is gradually being replicated in the South West
demands serious attention by all leaders of the church in Nigeria.”
“Undoubtedly,” he continued, “the unbalanced control of the political
machinery by a religion in the northern parts of Nigeria is at the
bedrock of the current religious intolerance that is plaguing the
region. To have such structure replicated at any other zone in the
country should be of grave concern to every Nigerian.
“Therefore, at the Christian Welfare Initiative (CWI) and the
Christian Association of Nigeria, (CAN), South-west, we recommend as
follows: Christians all over Nigeria and in the South West in
particular, should embark on prayer and fasting from January 14 –
February 14, 2014 for the Church in Nigeria and for the nation. Prayers
should be mobilized that every conspiracy that has been conceived
against Christians in Nigeria shall fail.
“We call on Nigeria’s president, the Inspector General of Police and
the governors of the states where mass murder is being committed to come
up with effective and proactive policing strategies to ensure that no
Nigerian citizen or village becomes a soft target for the harbingers of
terror.
“The use of technology (drones and CCTV) for surveillance and rapid
response purposes by security agents should be employed. We wish to
inform our Muslim relatives in the South-west that any Islamic violence
in Yoruba land portends grave danger, not only to Christians, but also
to Muslims. Sometime in 2013, when the terrorists from the North
attempted to blow up the Third Mainland Bridge in Lagos, they did not
make plans to evacuate Muslims from the impending disaster. If they had
succeeded, they would have killed both Christians and Muslims. As we see
in the North, Boko Haram is killing both Christians and Muslims.
“Therefore, Muslims in the South-west should join the clarion call
that the secularity of the region must be maintained. No Yoruba man or
woman will profit from any Islamization agenda in the South-west. For
our sake and for the sake of our descendants, we must maintain the
delicate balance of our society so that Yorubaland does not become the
next Syria, Iraq, or Somalia.
“It is a common saying with our people that ‘we shall not adopt
insanity with religion’. What is going on in the North of Nigeria must
be prevented from taking place in the South-west.
“Christians in the South West must raise their voices and demand that
the next governor of Lagos State in 2015 must be a genuine Christian.
After 16 years of Muslim governors, it is only fair that the next
governor should be a Christian.
“This is in keeping with the secular nature of the nation and maintains the delicate balance in our society.
“We are equally concerned about the gradual Islamization of the civil
service structure in states where the governor is a Muslim. There is a
visible lopsided appointment of directors, permanent secretaries, and
heads of parastatals in favor of Muslims.
“This is the scenario in the 12 Sharia states in northern Nigeria and
it is disturbing that it is being replicated in the South-west. It must
be reversed immediately, in the best interest of our people,” Atilade
said. [Vanguard]
No comments:
Post a Comment
your comment is very important to us but please don't spam