News has emerged of a Christmas eve attack on a church by
gunmen. Read the report below:
Nigeria gunmen kill six at Christmas church service
Gunmen attacked a church in volatile northern Nigeria during
a Christmas Eve service, killing six people including the pastor, before
setting the building ablaze, residents and police said Tuesday, as the pope
deplored "savage acts of terrorism" against Christians in Africa's
most populous nation.
The raid in Yobe state is the latest violence likely to be
blamed on radical Islamist sect Boko Haram, which has repeatedly targeted
churches during times of worship, including multiple attacks last year on
Christmas Day, during its deadly insurgency.
In his traditional Christmas message from the Vatican, Pope
Benedict XVI prayed for "concord in Nigeria, where savage acts of
terrorism continue to reap victims, particularly among Christians".
Boko Haram attacks have often targeted churches, as well as
police and other symbols of the establishment in Nigeria. Violence linked to
the insurgency is believed to have left some 3,000 people dead since 2009,
including killings by the security forces.
"A group of gunmen came into the village at midnight
and went straight to the church," said Usman Mansir, a resident of Peri
village near Potiskum, the economic capital of Yobe.
"They opened fire on them, killing the pastor and five
worshippers. They then set fire to the church," he added, specifying that
a branch of the Evangelical Church of West Africa (ECWA) was targeted.
A senior police official in Yobe confirmed the details of
the attack to AFP, but declined to be named, while Yobe's police chief Sanusi
Rufa'i said "this is a security issue" and refused to comment
further.
The head of the Christian Association of Nigeria in Yobe,
Idi Garba, told AFP that many worshippers at ECWA "are still
missing."
"I have been informed that six bodies have been
recovered," Garba said, adding that some who lived near the church
"fled their homes during the attack and it is assumed that they are still
hiding in the bush."
Residents reported that the gunmen also set fire to several
of the homes surrounding the church.
Like most of northern Nigeria, Yobe's population is
overwhelmingly Muslim, but the the commercial hub of Potiskum has a significant
Christian minority. Peri is just two kilometres outside the city.
Boko Haram has carried out several attacks in Yobe, which
borders the state of Borno, where the insurgent group is based.
The Islamists say they are fighting to create an Islamic
state in north of Nigeria, Africa's biggest oil producer, where most people in
the south are Christian.
Their insurgency has killed members of the security forces,
politicians and scores of Muslims, aside from attacks on Christians.
A series of Christmas Day attacks in northern and central
Nigeria last year killed at least 44 people and the violence has persisted over
the last 12 months, despite sporadic periods of relative calm.
Source: AFP
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