Fears that Nigerian Christians are
facing ever-increasing bloodshed and violence are growing, human rights groups
have warned, with the government failing to persecute and bring to justice the
Islamic radical factions that killed over 4,000 Christians in 2015 alone. "As
we speak, none of the perpetrators has been fished out and put on trial. That
is to say the government is fully aiding and abetting the sundry
ethno-religious cleansing and butcheries. It also partakes circumstantially and
vicariously, if not directly," said Emeka Umeagbalasi, chairman for the
International Society for Civil Liberties and the Rule of Law. Christians, who
make up close to half of the population in the country, have been targeted by
major terror groups, such as Boko Haram and the Muslim Fulani herdsmen, News24 noted.
Persecution watchdog groups such as Open Doors have warned that believers in
the north of the county are especially in danger, with at least 4,028 reported
Christian deaths in 2015, along with 198 attacks on churches. Boko Haram has
been seeking to take down the Nigerian government and force Christians to flee
the country, with Open Doors estimating that as many as 11,500 Christians have
been killed since the insurgency started in 2009. Although President Muhammadu
Buhari had promised to be tough on terrorism and help protect civilians,
Umeagbalasi said the "unwillingness" and "inability" of the
administration to protect Christians is "alarming" and
"deafening." Umeagbalasi called on Christian leaders to "rise to
the occasion" and stand up to the slaughter of Christians. "Advocacy
steps must also be taken by Christian bodies and leaders to force the
administration of Gen. Muhammadu Buhari to jettison the administration's
obvious State Jihadism and Islamist policies and return Nigeria back to
practicable constitutionalism, rule of law and secularity," he added.
AllAfrica reported that the Primate of the Church of Nigeria (Anglican
Communion), the Most Rev. Nicholas Okoh, has also called on Christians to
defend their faith against persecution and violence. "It was so in the
Bible time. If you read Revelation, you will find out that it is not new. What
we charge them is to be diligent in prayer, monitor their environment and stand
firm in the Lord," the cleric said. "Those in the volatile areas
should pray and wait on the Lord, follow the examples of Christian leaders of
old, some of them even died in order to defend their faith. They should not
sell out but be strong and defend their faith." Former Congressman Frank
Wolf, who is a distinguished senior fellow of the 21st Century Wilberforce
Initiative, told The Christian Post last week that Nigerian Christians
are looking to Western governments and churches for help, but at the present
feel abandoned by them. "They feel abandoned by the West, and by the
Church in the West. You are not hearing many in the West advocating (for them).
They would expect that the faith community in the West, Europe, would be
advocating, speaking out," Wolf told CP, noting that he visited Nigeria in
February and spoke with local leaders. The 21st Century Wilberforce Initiative
is calling for President Obama to establish a Special Envoy for Nigeria and the
Lake Chad Region, who would address and engage with the wide range of complex
realities facing refugees and internally displaced people facing terrorism and
insecurity.

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