Wednesday, May 2, 2018

Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Nigeria Fulani Herdsmen Terrorism: USA May Seek International Coalition to Protect Christians in Nigeria

Toyin Adepoju, you are an expert on this matter. Is this a conflict between:



a. Herders and sedentary farmers (occupation based conflict)

b. Christians and Muslims (religious conflict)

c. Fulani and the rest of the population (ethnic conflict)

d. North vs South  (regional conflict)

e.  .....................


Professor Gloria Emeagwali

From: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Oluwatoyin Adepoju <tvoluade@gmail.com>
Sent: Wednesday, May 2, 2018 12:08 PM
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Nigeria Fulani Herdsmen Terrorism: USA May Seek International Coalition to Protect Christians in Nigeria
 

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Africa Today africatoday80@gmail.com [NaijaObserver] <NaijaObserver@yahoogroups.com>
Date: Wed, May 2, 2018 at 3:57 PM



 

Re: Herdsmen terrorism: U.S. may seek international coalition to protect Christians in Nigeria
 

Herdsmen terrorism: U.S. may seek international coalition to protect Christians in Nigeria

https://atlanticpostng.com/herdsmen-terrorism-u-s-may-seek-international-coalition-to-protect-christians-in-nigeria/


In what sounded like the main reason for inviting Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari to White House, U.S. President Donald J. Trump has warned that his country will no longer accept the further murder of Christians in Nigeria by herdsmen and other Islamic extremists and terrorists.

In what sounded more like the reason for inviting Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari at this moment to White House, U.S. President Donald J. Trump has warned that his country will no longer accept the further murder of Christians in Nigeria by herdsmen and other Islamic extremists and terrorists.

"We have had very serious problems with Christians who are being murdered in Nigeria, we are going to be working on that problem very, very hard because we cannot allow that to happen," Trump said.

But going by the report of a prominent U.S. group, Open Doors USA, the Buhari administration is complicit and can therefore not be relied upon by the Trump administration to achieve this goal.

In a carefully crafted op-ed by its President/CEO, David Curry, which was published first, by America's most widely circulated print newspaper, USA Today and later by The Atlantic Post, the protection of Christians in Nigeria can only be achieved by an international coalition.

He said, "World community must work together to stop increasing anti-Christian violence in Nigeria. New wave of Islamic extremism can't be allowed to succeed."

"When he meets with Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari Monday, President Trump needs to seize this opportunity to call Buhari to account for allowing unchecked atrocities against Christians in his country.

"While Boko Haram has made headlines for murdering and terrorizing people in Nigeria, in this case  President Buhari is allowing members of his own ancestral group — the Fulani — to attack innocent communities.

"The unimpeded actions of this group of extremists, loosely known as "militant Fulani herdsmen," are creating a humanitarian crisis of shocking proportions in Nigeria.

"Indeed, most people have never even heard about this brutal group, which earlier this month executed an attack that killed 19 Christians.

"President Trump must not pass up a prime opportunity to fight this injustice by facing down its chief enabler. Buhari intends to speak with Trump about the promotion of economic growth, fighting terrorism, and building on Nigeria's role as a democratic leader in the region.

"But the conversation must not stop there.

"Buhari's Fulani kin are responsible for hundreds of deaths already in 2018, attacking villages and forcing thousands of people to flee their homes and land. The scale of the Fulani aggression threatens to surpass Boko Haram's reign of terror, based on the sheer number of deaths."

David Curry concluded by saying, "Just as with Boko Haram, the Fulani's violence must be acknowledged in White House hallways, covered by media with depth and nuance, and confronted by the leaders of the free world, beginning with President Trump when he meets on Monday with President Buhari."


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Group seeks new U.S.. religious freedom post for Nigeria

http://www.bpnews.net/50505/group-seeks-new-us-religious-freedom-post-for-nigeria

FALLS CHURCH, Va. (BP) -- A religious and secular coalition will urge Congress to create a U.S. coordinator for religious freedom in Nigeria as terrorism against Christians and other religious minorities intensifies in the African nation.

Muslim Fulani herdsmen are helping drive a resurgence of terrorism in Nigeria that is largely directed at Christians.
Screen capture from Biafra Television
Muslim Fulani herdsmen are helping drive a resurgence of terrorism in Nigeria that is largely directed at Christians.
Screen capture from Biafra Television
Termed the special coordinator for religious minorities and terrorism, the post would serve as a direct link between U.S. and Nigerian governments to address religious persecution, terrorism and the resulting economic crisis in Nigeria, a coalition representative told Baptist Press today (March 8).

The Global Coalition Working to Defeat Persecution and Violence in Nigeria, including representatives of the Baptist World Alliance (BWI), the 21st Century Wilberforce Initiative (21Wilberforce) and the newly formed International Committee on Nigeria (ICON), decided to petition Congress for the new post after hosting a meeting with Nigerian governors and others Feb. 27-28 at BWI headquarters in Falls Church, Va.

The U.S. State Department currently operates an Office of International Religious Freedom, headed since Feb. 1 by U.S.. Ambassador-at-Large for International Religious Freedom Sam Brownback, as well as an embassy and consulate in Nigeria.

"But there's been no sort of special coordinator, no individual that's taken up the cause or mantel of addressing specifically the Boko Haram and the Fulani pastoralist militia," ICON Director Kyle Abts told BP today.

Joining the coalition at the February meeting were Adeniyi Ojutiku, a North Carolina Southern Baptist working to help his Nigerian homeland through the Lift Up Now grassroots group. Also in attendance were several governors from Nigeria's Middle Belt, the Church of the Brethren, International Christian Concern, Doctors Without Borders and other groups.

Boko Haram terrorists and a militant group of Fulani herdsmen have reportedly strengthened in Nigeria's Middle Belt in recent months, more than two years after Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari declared a technical defeat of Boko Haram.

Texas native Elijah Brown, BWI general secretary since Jan. 1, said Nigeria is at a critical human rights juncture that could affect the entire continent of Africa with global consequences. The longstanding dispute between Muslim Fulani herdsmen and Christian farmers can no longer be viewed simplistically, Brown told BP.

"I believe that the violence sweeping through Nigeria is no longer best understood through an analysis of farmer-herder conflict," he said, recapping an address he made at the coalition meeting. "With thousands of individuals killed, entire communities burned to the ground, famine-inducing conditions inflicted upon entire populations, and the use of helicopters, machine guns mounted to vehicles and sophisticated weapons, this conflict has morphed into one of militant attack.

"Predominantly Christian communities currently account for over 85 percent of the victims," Brown said. "With ongoing discrimination against religious minority communities across northern Nigeria, Boko Haram to the northeast, and Fulani militancy in the Middle Belt, Nigeria is the only country in the world to be currently facing two of the top five most lethal terrorist organizations, and Christians, including some Baptists, are caught in the crossfire."

Within the next month, the coalition will seek a Congressional hearing and request the new post, Abts said. ICON promotes itself as a diverse "group of committed Nigerians and other nationalities joining forces, resources, and voices" to strengthen oppressed and minority groups in Nigeria.

In most recent waves of violence, Fulani herdsmen have been blamed for killing at least 170 Christians in attacks on villages and towns in Nigeria's Middle Belt in January, according to reports. Nigeria's military has launched a six-week offensive to combat the violence that has increased in conjunction with several new local anti-grazing laws meant to protect the farmers.

In February, Boko Haram terrorists kidnapped as many as 101 Nigerian schoolgirls who remain missing, mirroring the terrorists' kidnapping of more than 300 schoolgirls in 2014 from a school in the Christian town of Chibok.

Buhari claimed in December 2015 he had technically defeated Boko Haram, weakening the group so much that it would only be able to carry out isolated suicide bombings.

Boko Haram, which began attacking first Christians and then others in its attempts to establish Sharia law in Nigeria, has killed an estimated 20,000 people and displaced 2 million in Nigeria and neighboring nations since 2009. The terrorists have claimed allegiance to the Islamic State and have been accused of killing Christian farmers increasingly in raids since 2017 in cooperation with or under the guise of Fulani herdsmen.

http://www.bpnews.net/50505/group-seeks-new-us-religious-freedom-post-for-nigeria

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