Weblog: Nigerian Christians Attack Muslims, Kill Dozens
Plus: Sudan elected to U.N. human-rights commission, Muslims, mosques, and churches in Europe, Christians in India, and more articles from online sources around the world.
Compiled by Rob Moll | posted 5/01/2004 12:00AM
Reports estimate that between 67 and 300 are dead after Christian ethnic Taroks attacked Muslim cattle-herders in the town of Yelwa in central Nigeria's Plateau State. The Tarok ethnic group used machine guns mounted on jeeps, along with rifles and machetes, to attack the Muslim community. Possibly three mosques were damaged and at least 67 people have been buried, while hundreds more have fled or disappeared. Just last week, the Christian Tarok were attacked by the Muslim Hausa in the region.
In the most recent attack, the Associated Press reports that more that 100 were killed and 1,000 homes destroyed. "It will take time to account for the exact number of dead and missing. It's mass murder, because machine guns were used, not machetes," Justice Abdulkadir Orire, secretary general of the Jama'atu Nasril Islam, told Agence France-Presse.
Orire told Reuters that the attack had been planned and received the help of local officials. "Police stationed in Yelwa had been withdrawn four days before the attack, despite complaints from local Muslims that they were surrounded by Taroks and tensions were rising." Orire said. "It seems the governor is supporting the move. We heard that the government said non-indigenes should move out of the area. That is very bad. He should look after everyone in the state and not just his own tribe."
President Olusegun Obasanjo sent as many as 600 riot police to the area to prevent more attacks. According to Reuters, "Yelwa has already witnessed one of the most horrific massacres of the conflict, when 48 Christians were killed by Fulani militia in a church that was later burned in February.
"The last three months have seen the bloodiest fighting in the region since the state capital, Jos, was torn apart by ethnic violence in 2001 that killed 1,000 people."
Religious tensions run high in the country. The northern Nigerian state of Zamfara introduced a stricter set of Shari'ah laws last week, saying that all "unauthorized" places of worship will be shut down. The governor, Ahmed Sani, "ordered the destruction of all Christian churches and non-Islamic places of worship," according to the Dallas Morning News.
Sudan elected to U.N. rights group, U.S. walks out
While some are saying the government of Sudan is committing genocide in the country's western Darfur region, and negotiated cease-fires in the Christian and animist south are regularly broken, the Sudanese government was just re-elected to the United Nation's main human-rights watchdog group yesterday. Just weeks ago the world said "never again" following the ten-year anniversary of the genocide in Rwanda. At the time, Rwanda sat on the Security Council and negotiated for no action to be taken while hundreds of thousands were killed.
Sichan Siv, the U.S. delegate to the council, walked out, saying, "The United States will not participate in this absurdity. Our delegation will absent itself from the meeting rather than lend support to Sudan's candidacy.''
A peace process between the Muslim north and Christian and animist south, which Colin Powell predicted would be in place last December, has gone nowhere while the government blames rebels in the Darfur region. More on Sudan and the failed peace process is available on our Sudan page.
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May (Web-only) 2004, Vol. 48