Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
Kevin ClarkeJanuary 09, 2015

While Western media has been transfixed by the attacks and hostage taking conducted by Islamic extremists in Paris, in Nigeria's northern Borno state, another Islamist terrorist group, Boko Haram, has been conducting an unprecedented rampage this week that may have claimed as many as 2,000 lives. Thousands more have been driven into flight; officials in neighboring Chad report that at least 3,000 Nigerians have taken refuge within its borders.

"The attack on Baga and surrounding towns, looks as if it could be Boko Haram’s deadliest act in a catalogue of increasingly heinous attacks carried out by the group," said Daniel Eyre, Nigeria researcher for Amnesty International. "If reports that the town was largely razed to the ground and that hundreds or even as many as 2,000 civilians were killed are true, this marks a disturbing and bloody escalation of Boko Haram’s ongoing onslaught against the civilian population.

"We are currently working to find out more details of what happened during the attack on Baga and the surrounding area," he added. "This attack reiterates the urgent need for Boko Haram to stop the senseless killing of civilians and for the Nigerian government to take measures to protect a population who live in constant fear of such attacks."

In addition to the mounting human casualties, church officials in Nigeria report that Catholic churches have been burned in the city of Baga and in the surrounding villages.

"I received a message of the Christians Association of Nigeria, the association of Christian churches in Nigeria, which states that in that area Boko Haram has burned several churches and caused numerous victims," Father Patrick Tor Alumuku, Director of Social Communications of the Archdiocese of Abuja, the federal capital of Nigeria, told Agenzia Fides.

The Boko Haram group attacked Baga town on Jan. 7. In recent days it had overrun a military base, driving off a multinational military task force in charge of ensuring the safety of the area. National media report hundreds of casualties among civilians. Father Alumuku told Fides such figures are ordinarily downplayed by the Nigerian government. "One must bare in mind that the presidential election campaign for February has opened this week. The situation is particularly delicate," he said.

He added, "When those of Boko Haram arrive in a major city, they make no distinction between Christians and Muslims, and the population flees, without distinction of religion. Boko Haram separates Muslims from Christians only in the smaller villages."

"Next to the combatants from Nigeria, Boko Haram has been strengthened by jihadist members from Libya and Mali," he said. "Their goal is to create a caliphate in northern Nigeria."

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.

The latest from america

The two high-profile Catholics are among a diverse group of 19 individuals to be honored by President Biden for making “exemplary contributions to the prosperity, values, or security of the United States.”
Speaking May 3 on the need for holistic higher education, the pope said that some universities are “too liberal” and do not place enough emphasis on forming their students into whole people.
Manifesting techniques abound in the online world. But creators are conflating manifesting with prayer, especially in their love lives.
Christine LenahanMay 03, 2024
This week on Jesuitical, Zac and Ashley share their conversation with Cardinal Wilton Gregory—the archbishop of what he calls “the epicenter of division”—on the role of a church in a polarized society.
JesuiticalMay 03, 2024