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NIGERIA: ISLAMIC MILITANTS KILL DOZENS OF CHRISTIANS; CHILDREN BURNED

BosNewsLife reports on more attacks over the weekend in Nigeria which left dozens more people dead…

BosNewsLife

Christians in northeastern Nigeria were among those facing a new wave of Islamic violence as the Boko Haram terror group killed 86 people, including children, who were heard screaming as they burned to death after militants torched huts, survivors and officials said on Sunday.

The overnight attack on Dalori village and two nearby camps housing tens of thousands of refugees came shortly after suicide attacks on two mainly Christian communities in northeast Nigeria left at least 26 people dead and dozens of others injured, Christians said.

The overnight attack on Dalori village and two nearby camps housing tens of thousands of refugees came shortly after suicide attacks on two mainly Christian communities in northeast Nigeria left at least 26 people dead and dozens of others injured, Christians said.

On Friday, Boko Haram militants detonated explosives in a crowded market in Gombi, Adamawa state, killing at least eight people, according to church sources.

Earlier in Chibok, Borno state, suspected Boko Haram suicide bombers attacked a crowded market on Wednesday, killing at least 17 civilians and a soldier while injuring some 30 others, Christians said.

Following the government troop recovery of the town, the market had reopened that day for the first time since Boko Haram took over Chibok two years ago, according to area Christians.

The violence added to concerns over the whereabouts of more than 300 Christian high school girls who were kidnapped in Chibok in April, 2014. Of the girls kidnapped since the Islamic militants seized the town two years ago, 219 remain missing, Christians say.

On Sunday, many Christians were believed to be among the victims targeted by Boko Haram in the latest overnight attack.

Witnesses said they saw scores of charred corpses and bodies with bullet wounds in the streets following Saturday night’s violence in Dalori village and two nearby camps housing 25,000 refugees, just five kilometres from Maiduguri, the birthplace of Boko Haram and the biggest city in Nigeria’s northeast.

Boko Haram seeks to impose sharia or Islamic law throughout Nigeria and has ordered Christians to leave northern Nigeria. It has also continued to carry out terrorist attacks since losing territory to the Nigerian military last year.

The group has inspired others, including Fulani herdsmen, who last month attacked two homes in the predominantly Christian village of Hwak Kwata-Zawan, located near the city of Jos, killing more than a dozen people, BosNewsLife learned.

They also raided a nearby compound consisting of Nigerians who had been initially displaced by violence elsewhere in the country’s Plateau state, Christians said.

“The total number of fatalities resulting from the raids has reached 15, leaving many more in the community grief-stricken and emotionally wounded,” added Voice Of the Martyrs Canada (VOMC), an aid and advocacy group closely following the situation.

In one of the village homes, 57-year-old Rose Monday was killed while trying to protect her three young grandchildren from the gunmen, but two later died of their injuries, Christians said.

Their elder sister, five-year-old Anna, who “miraculously survived”, is receiving treatment in hospital for gunshot wounds, VOMC said. “Rose’s daughter (the children’s aunt) added that their remaining relatives are consoled to know that one day they will all be reunited as a family with the Lord Jesus Christ.”

The Christian home that was attacked reportedly belonged to Gyang Christopher Choji who managed to escape the raid, uninjured.

The 58-year-old believer said his family members had retired to their rooms when they suddenly heard gunshots. “When the shooting became intense, and we were under siege, I advised my family that we run out to save our lives,” he explained in published remarks. “I was able to escape, but five members of my family were brutally killed by these gunmen.”

The seven other victims that were killed during the raids were from the nearby compound housing, VOMC said.

Gunmen reportedly visited the area earlier that day to survey the village while most of the residents were
at church. The militants even had the audacity to ask local children for water while planning their vicious attacks.

“The resulting raids have left an entire village in a terrible state of shock and greatly traumatised. Church leaders say the attacks of the Fulani herdsmen on their communities constitute a war ‘by Islam to eliminate Christianity’ in Nigeria,” VOMC said.

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