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Testimony of An Angry Borno Priest: The Day 200 Were Killed, Soldiers hid-off

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In the days before a vicious wave of  attacks on February 15 that killed hundreds in northeast Nigeria,  villagers fled their homes, fearful something terrible was about to  happen. But the army was nowhere to be seen, a church leader says.Militants of the Islamist Boko Haram  sect swept out of the hills and bush of the Gwoza Mountains and into  eight villages across Borno and Adamawa states. Armed with rifles,  knifes and fire, they killed at least 200 and burned scores of homes and  shops.As many as 121 of the dead were from the  Borno village of Izghe, a predominantly Christian town in the  Muslim-majority northeast. Near midnight on February 15, gunmen dressed  in military fatigues and chanting “Allahu Akbar”, meaning “God is  great”, rode in on trucks and motorcycles, survivors and local sources  say. The attackers ordered villagers to gather together and then opened  fire, chasing and killing any who attempted to escape and slitting the  throats of several victims.Though Borno and two other north-eastern  states have been under an official state of emergency since May 2013,  there were no Nigerian soldiers standing between the attackers and the  residents, a church leader told World Watch Monitor. Two days earlier,  10 soldiers had been killed in a clash with members of Boko Haram in  that area, but had since withdrawn, according to the District Head of  Izghe, Mallam Bulama Apagu.A local church leader told World Watch  Monitor that rumours of an eventual reprisal attack by Boko Haram,  without protection of the army, prompted hundreds to flee.“Christians live in perpetual fear of  being attacked. In recent days, it becomes very risky to travel from one  place to another as attacks have become recurrent, almost on daily  basis. We feel lonely and abandoned and rely on God for our security,”  the church official said. World Watch Monitor is withholding his name to  preserve his safety.A survivor of the attack, farmer  Barnabas Idi, who scaled the fence of his house and crawled for about 40  minutes to safety, was quoted in news reports saying security forces  were not present during the attack, which lasted five hours.The recent upsurge in violence has raised criticism over the government’s ability to root out the militants.“The authorities have so far failed to  fulfil their task of ensuring peace and security to Nigerians in every  area of the country,” Mgr. Ignatius Ayau Kaigama, archbishop of Jos and  president of the Nigerian Episcopal Conference, told the Catholic news  agency Fides. “Despite the efforts and significant resources invested to  combat these fanatical groups, policymakers and the Nigerian military  have not yet managed to get to the bottom of the problem.”Nigeria’s military ruler during a  portion of the 1980s, retired Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, condemned the  continued violence in Borno state.“There is no justification for this  wanton disregard for the sanctity and dignity of human life. Any  ideology that traffics in terror and violence is a devilish ideology  that has no place in a civilised society,” he said in a statement posted  on his facebook page on Feb. 16.The Northern States Governors Forum,  representing Nigeria’s 19 northern states, urged the federal government  to arrest the violence before it spreads to other parts of the country.  And the United Nations human rights office condemned “in the strongest  terms” the killings in Izghe and elsewhere. About 367 people have been  killed at the hands of Boko Haram in 22 separate incidents during the  first six weeks of 2014.“We are appalled by the extreme and  indiscriminate violence which Nigeria has being witnessing in recent  times, including the attacks on two villages on 11 February, which left  39 people dead, 65 injured and reportedly 2,000 homes destroyed,”  spokesperson Ravina Shamdasani told a news conference in Geneva (on Feb.  18).Violence has swept across Nigeria’s  north in recent months. In January, attackers stormed this Catholic  church during mass, blocked the main door, detonated homemade bombs, and  opened fire. Violence has swept across Nigeria’s north in recent  months. In January, attackers stormed this Catholic church during mass,  blocked the main door, detonated homemade bombs, and opened fire.  Twitter / @ChristianPostSituated in Borno state near the  Cameroon border, Izghe is a Christian enclave in Nigeria’s predominantly  Muslim northern states. On the same day, other villages in both Borno  and Adamawa states, including Kirchang, Kwambula, Shuwa, Dagu, Yinagu,  Bitiku and Yazza, were attacked by gunmen.The first reports indicated between 90  to 106 people were killed. But the death toll has increased as  volunteers have discovered more bodies in destroyed houses, nearby  bushes and farmlands. The victims were buried in mass graves of 15  bodies each, a local leader told news media. More than 10,000 people  have fled across the Borno state border into Adamawa state for fear of  new Islamist attacks, local government chairman Maina Ularamu told the  Associated Press.Borno, Adamawa and Yobe states have been  the most affected by the five-year Islamist insurgency in Nigeria.  President Goodluck Jonathan declared a state of emergency in the three  states in May 2013, deploying the army to the region, but without  significant impact.Nigeria ranks No. 14 on the 2014 World  Watch List, a list of the 50 countries where life for Christians is most  difficult, according to Christian charity Open Doors International. The  violence of Boko Haram, which has killed thousands of Christians since  2009 in its attempt to establish fundamentalist Islamic rule, is a major  reason for the country’s high ranking. But Open Doors International  says the situation is more complex, especially in Nigeria’s 12 northern  states where Islamic law is in place and “where local government and  social groups leave hardly any space for Christians to live their own  lives.

(From Biafra Galaxy)

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