iykecicero: 4:00am On Dec 22, 2019 |
Lagos, Nigeria:
A slow-motion war is under way in Africa’s most populous country. It’s a massacre of Christians, massive in scale and horrific in brutality. And the world has hardly noticed.
A Nigerian Pentecostal Christian, director of a nongovernmental organization that works for mutual understanding between Nigeria’s Christians and Muslims, alerted me to it. “Have you heard of the Fulani?” he asked at our first meeting, in Paris, speaking the flawless, melodious English of the Nigerian elite. The Fulani are an ethnic group, generally described as shepherds from mostly Muslim Northern Nigeria, forced by climate change to move with their herds toward the more temperate Christian South. They number 14 million to 15 million in a nation of 191 million.
Among them is a violent element. “They are Islamic extremists of a new stripe,” the NGO director said, “more or less linked with Boko Haram,” the sect that became infamous for the 2014 kidnapping of 276 Christian girls in the state of Borno. “I beg you,” he said, “come and see for yourself.” Knowing of Boko Haram but nothing of the Fulani, I accept.
The 2019 Global Terrorism Index estimates that Fulani extremists have become deadlier than Boko Haram and ed for the majority of the country’s 2,040 documented terrorist fatalities in 2018. To learn more about them, I travel to Godogodo, in the center of the country, where I meet a beautiful woman named Jumai Victor, 28. On July 15, she says, Fulani extremists stormed into her village on long-saddle motorcycles, three to a bike, shouting “Allahu Akbar!” They torched houses and killed her four children before her eyes.
When her turn came and they noticed she was pregnant, a discussion ensued. Some didn’t want to see her belly slit, so they compromised by cutting up and amputating her left arm with a machete. She speaks quickly and emotionlessly, staring into space as if she lost her face along with her arm. The village chief, translating for her, chokes up. Tears stream down his cheeks when she finishes her .
I venture north to Adnan, where Lyndia David, 34, tells her story of survival. On the morning of March 15, rumors reached her village that Fulani raiders were nearby. She was dressing for church as her husband prepared to a group of men who’d stand watch. He urged her to take refuge at her sister’s home in another village.
Her first night there, sentinels woke her with a whistle. She left the house to find flames spreading around her. Fulani surrounded her. Then she heard a voice: “Come this way, you can get through!” She did, and her putative savior leapt out of the underbrush, cut three fingers off her right hand, carved the nape of her neck with his machete, shot her, doused her body with gasoline, and lit it. She somehow survived. A few weeks later she returned to her village and learned that the raiders had leveled it the same night. Her husband was among the 72 they murdered.
The Christian Middle Belt is a land of blooming prairies that once delighted English colonizers. On the outskirts of Jos, capital of Plateau state, I visit the ruins of a burned-down church. I spot another, intact. A man emerges to yell at me in English that I don’t belong there. Stalling, I learn that he is Turkish, a member of a “religious mutual assistance group” that is opening madrassas for the daughters of Fulani.
That day I crisscross the Middle Belt. Roads are crumbled, bridges collapsed; destroyed houses cast broken shadows over tree stumps and trails of black ash and blood. Maize rots in the abandoned fields. The local Christians have been killed or are too terrorized to come out and harvest it. In the distance are clusters of white smudges—the Fulani herds grazing on the lush grass. When we approach, the armed shepherds wave us off.
The Anglican bishop of Jos, Benjamin Kwashi, has had his livestock stolen three times. During the third raid he was dragged into his room, a gun to his head. He dropped to his knees and prayed at the top of his voice until the thrumming of a helicopter drove his assailants off.
Bishop Kwashi describes the Fulani extremists’ pattern: They usually arrive at night. They are barefoot, so you can’t hear them coming unless they’re on motorcycle. Sometimes a dog sounds the alert, sometimes a sentinel. Then a terrifying stampede, whirling clouds of dust, cries of encouragement from the invaders. Before villagers can take shelter or flee, the invaders are upon them in their houses, swinging machetes, burning, pillaging, raping. They don’t kill everyone. At some point they stop, recite a verse from the Quran, round up the livestock and retreat. They need survivors to spread fear from village to village, to bear witness that the Fulani raiders fear nothing but Allah and are capable of anything.
The heads of 17 Christian communities have come to the outskirts of Abuja, Nigeria’s federal capital, to meet me in a nondescript compound. Some have traveled for days in packed buses or minivans. Each arrives accompanied by a victim or two.
Here they are, an exhausted yet earnestly hopeful group of some 40 women and men, keenly aware of the moment’s gravity. One carries a USB key, another a handwritten , a third a folder full of photos, captioned and dated. I accept these records, overwhelmed by the weight of the bearers’ hope that the world will recognize the horrors they experienced.
Taking the floor in turn, the survivors confirm the modus operandi Bishop Kwashi described, each adding an awful detail. The mutilated cadavers of women. A mute man commanded to deny his faith, then cut up with a machete until he screams. A girl strangled with the chain of her crucifix.
Westerners here depict the Fulani extremists as an extended, rampant Boko Haram. An American humanitarian says the Fulani recruit volunteers to serve internships in Borno State, where Boko Haram is active. Another says Boko Haram “instructors” have been spotted in Bauchi, another northeastern state, where they are teaching elite Fulani militants to handle more-sophisticated weapons that will replace their machetes. Yet whereas Boko Haram are confined to perhaps 5% of Nigerian territory, the Fulani terrorists operate across the country.
Villagers west of Jos show the weapons they use to defend themselves: bows, slings, daggers, sticks, leather whips, spears. Even these meager arms have to be concealed. When the army comes through after the attacks, soldiers tell the villagers their paltry weapons are illegal and confiscate them.
Several times I note the proximity of a military base that might have been expected to protect civilians. But the soldiers didn’t come; or, if they did, it was only after the battle; or they claimed not to have received the texted SOS calls in time, or not to have had orders to respond, or to have been delayed on an imable road.
“What do you expect?” our driver asks as we take off in a convoy for his burned-down church. “The army is in league with the Fulani. They go hand in hand.” After one attack, “we even found a dog tag and a uniform.”
“It’s hardly surprising,” says Dalyop Salomon Mwantiri, one of the few lawyers in the region who dare to represent victims. “The general staff of the Nigerian army is a Fulani. The whole bureaucracy is Fulani.”
So is President Muhammadu Buhari. In April 2016 Mr. Buhari ordered security forces to “secure all communities under attack by herdsmen.” In July 2019 a spokesman for the president said in a statement: “No one has the right to ask anyone or group to depart from any part of the country, whether North, South, East or West.”
Most Christians I meet express disgust at the vague language suggesting culpability on both sides. Their stories tend to validate claims of the government’s complicity. In Riyom district, three displaced Nigerians and a soldier were gunned down this June as they attempted to return home. The villagers know the assailants. Police identified them. Everyone knows they took refuge in a nearby village. But there they are under the protection of the ardos, a local emir. No arrests occurred.
Village chief Sunday Abdu recounts another example, a 2017 attack on Nkiedonwhro. This time the military came to warn villagers of a threat. They ordered the women and children to take shelter in a school. But after the civilians complied, a soldier fired a shot in the air. A second shot sounded in the distance, seemingly in response. Minutes later, after the soldiers had departed, the assailants appeared, went directly to the classroom, and fired into the cowering group, killing 27.
I also meet some Fulani—the first time by chance. Traveling by road near a river bed, we come on a checkpoint consisting of a rope stretched across the road, a hut and two armed men. “No age,” says one, wearing a jacket on which are sewn badges in Arabic and Turkish. “This is Fulani land, the holy land of Usman dan Fodio, our king—and you whites can’t come in.” The conquests of dan Fodio (1754-1817) led to the establishment of the Sokoto Caliphate over the Fula and Hausa lands.
The second encounter is on the outskirts of Abuja. Driving toward the countryside, we reach a village unlike the others we’ve seen in the Christian zone. There’s a ditch, and behind it a hedge of bushes and pilings. The place seems closed off from the world. From huts emerge a swarm of children and their mothers, the women covered from head to foot.
It’s a village of Fulani nomads who carried out a tiny, localized Fulanization after the Christians cleared out. “What are you doing here?” demands an adolescent boy wearing a T-shirt adorned with a swastika. “Are you taking advantage of the fact that it’s Friday, and we’re in the mosque, to come spy on our women? The Quran forbids that!” When I ask if wearing a swastika isn’t also contrary to the Quran, he looks puzzled, then launches into a feverish tirade. He says he knows he’s wearing “a German insignia,” but he believes that “all men are brothers,” except for the “bad souls” who “hate Muslims.”
Later I encounter Fulani near Lagos, Nigeria’s largest city, which is in the south on the Gulf of Guinea. North of the city is an open-air market where Fulani sell their livestock. I am with three young Christians, survivors of a Middle Belt massacre who live in a camp for displaced persons. They pretend to be cousins buying an animal for a family feast. As they negotiate over a white-horned pygmy goat, I look for Fulani willing to talk.
Most have come from Jigawa state, on the border with Niger, crossing the country south in trucks to bring their stock here. Although I learn little about their trip, they eagerly express their joy in being here, on the border of this contemptible promised land, where they expect to “dip the Quran in the sea.”
There are “too many Christians in Lagos,” says Abadallah, who looks to be in his 40s. “The Christians are dogs and children of dogs. You say Christians. To us they are traitors. They adopted the religion of the whites. There is no place here for friends of the whites, who are impure.” A postcard vendor s the group and offers me portraits of Osama bin Laden and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. He agrees the Christians will eventually leave and Nigeria will be “free.”
Some professional disinformers will try to reduce the violence here to one of the “interethnic wars” that inflame Africa. They’ll likely find, here and there, acts of reprisal against the Fula and Hausa. But as my trip concludes, I have the terrible feeling of being carried back to Rwanda in the 1990s, to Darfur and South Sudan in the 2000s.
Will the West let history repeat itself in Nigeria? Will we wait, as usual, until the disaster is done before taking notice? Will we stand by as international Islamic extremism opens a new front across this vast land, where the children of Abraham have coexisted for so long?
Mr. Lévy is author of “The Empire and the Five Kings: America’s Abdication and the Fate of the World” (Henry Holt, 2019). This article was translated from French by Steven B. Kennedy.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-new-war-against-africas-christians-11576880200
Picture 1 - Bernard-Henri Lévy speaks to Fulani men in Nigeria. PHOTO: GILLES HERTZOG
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Xisnin(m): 4:16am On Dec 22, 2019 |
Not surprised.
The government has been too weak in fighting Jihadist groups.
While the CJN is fighting for jihad through legal means the invaders are doing theirs through killings.
Many of these foreign "bandits" are now into kidnapping on highways.
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harmonyAris(f): 4:17am On Dec 22, 2019 |
This is so sad and unfortunate. Funny thing is, if christians are generally allowed to bear arms and fight back, this people won't wait o I swear
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chriskosherbal(m): 4:24am On Dec 22, 2019 |
Religious war is one of the most dangerous war one can ever experience, cos it's centers on believe/belief, the painful part of it is that it is the poor among them that suffers the hit most times.
God deliver this nation from the hands of blood sucking wannabe leaders.
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MoIbrahim: 4:33am On Dec 22, 2019 |
All this jobbers looking for aids and grant. Soon he'll receive more dollars to "save Nigerian Christians" and/or "rebuild churches", and he'll use it to buy private jets and mansions.
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EagleNest(m): 4:36am On Dec 22, 2019 |
Is this part of what TY Danjuma know? Turkey was mentioned repeatedly, are they the "behind the scene" collaborators?
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MelloJelly: 4:40am On Dec 22, 2019 |
iykecicero:
Lagos, Nigeria:
There are “too many Christians in Lagos,” says Abadallah, who looks to be in his 40s. “The Christians are dogs and children of dogs. You say Christians. To us they are traitors. They adopted the religion of the whites. There is no place here for friends of the whites, who are impure.” A postcard vendor s the group and offers me portraits of Osama bin Laden and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. He agrees the Christians will eventually leave and Nigeria will be “free.”
The fucking irony. Islam is from arabs and they are far worse than whites. they are so retarded
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austinsmat(m): 4:42am On Dec 22, 2019 |
Fulani matter
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Henry22(m): 4:50am On Dec 22, 2019 |
It's only a slowpoke that won't believe........
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slimderek(m): 4:53am On Dec 22, 2019 |
Finally gaining international fame.
The impending doom is inevitable
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helinues: 5:02am On Dec 22, 2019 |
Which war against Christians?
Do Christians love themselves? Cos me Wondering why Catholics wont marry an Anglican... Or is it Pentecostal that have vowed not to have anything to do with Celestial church?
If Una don deceive Una self finish, make we know
Modified : Why do religious people get aggressive whenever there religious beliefs are been questioned? Still on the questioning
Abi why the attacks on my innocent questions.. Stay clear or ban awaits attacking comments
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Henry22(m): 5:09am On Dec 22, 2019 |
helinues:
Which war against Christians?
Do Christians love themselves? Cos me Wondering why Catholics wont marry an Anglican... Or is it Pentecostal that have vowed not to have anything to do with Celestial church?
If Una don deceive Una self finish, make we know
Truly self deceit.......
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Kingspin(m): 5:12am On Dec 22, 2019 |
The terrorism faith has nothing meaningful to contribute to humankind throughout history.
Most useless religion on earth and beyond.
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Sirjamo: 6:41am On Dec 22, 2019 |
This is a misleading and mischievous article. Fulani don't fight for Islam, they fight for their Animals. Majority of nomadic Fulani don't believe in any religion, they don't go to mosque, neither do they offer Salat anywhere.
Boko haram too might be claiming Islam, but they are deceiving themselves. Whenever their camps get raided by security agents, they always find thousands of Condoms, alcohol, hard drugs and women they keep as sex slaves. Rape alone is punishable by death in Islam so all Boko haram has been sentenced to death Insha Allah, thousands of our Mujahedin in the civilian JTF have been helping the military to destroy those unfortunate infidels called Boko haram, because they have no place in Islam and the World!!!
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GamalNasser: 6:49am On Dec 22, 2019 |
Sirjamo:
This is a misleading and mischievous article. Fulani don't fight for Islam, they fight for their Animals. Majority of nomadic Fulani don't believe in any religion, they don't go to mosque, neither do they offer Salat anywhere.
Boko haram too might be claiming Islam, but they are deceiving themselves. Whenever their camps get raided by security agents, they always find thousands of Condoms, alcohol, hard drugs and women they keep as sex slaves. Rape alone is punishable by death in Islam so all Boko haram has been sentenced to death Insha Allah, thousands of our Mujahedin in the civilian JTF have been helping the military to destroy those unfortunate infidels called Boko haram, because they have no place in Islam and the World!!!
Shut up !!!! You think everyone here is dumb? Fulanis have been the principal vehicle for the spread of Islam in West Africa and their cattle trade are only a means of financing their violent propagation of Islam... have all the places they captured in Kaduna and and Jos under the leadership of Buhari not been converted to Islamic homesteads , have their chiefdoms not been all not been converted to Emirates . I wonder what you SW people gain in ing such evil
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Ojiofor: 6:51am On Dec 22, 2019 |
helinues:
Which war against Christians?
Do Christians love themselves? Cos me Wondering why Catholics wont marry an Anglican... Or is it Pentecostal that have vowed not to have anything to do with Celestial church?
If Una don deceive Una self finish, make we know
They should be killed because they don't love
themselves?
Modified.
Unfortunately this is how an average Osun Muslims reason.
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Nigerianization(m): 6:53am On Dec 22, 2019 |
Sirjamo:
This is a misleading and mischievous article. Fulani don't fight for Islam, they fight for their Animals. Majority of nomadic Fulani don't believe in any religion, they don't go to mosque, neither do they offer Salat anywhere.
Boko haram too might be claiming Islam, but they are deceiving themselves. Whenever their camps get raided by security agents, they always find thousands of Condoms, alcohol, hard drugs and women they keep as sex slaves. Rape alone is punishable by death in Islam so all Boko haram has been sentenced to death Insha Allah, thousands of our Mujahedin in the civilian JTF have been helping the military to destroy those unfortunate infidels called Boko haram, because they have no place in Islam and the World!!!
But the late ISIS leader Al Baghdadi had PhD in Islamic studies.
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Turantula(m): 6:59am On Dec 22, 2019 |
Sirjamo:
This is a misleading and mischievous article. Fulani don't fight for Islam, they fight for their Animals. Majority of nomadic Fulani don't believe in any religion, they don't go to mosque, neither do they offer Salat anywhere.
Boko haram too might be claiming Islam, but they are deceiving themselves. Whenever their camps get raided by security agents, they always find thousands of Condoms, alcohol, hard drugs and women they keep as sex slaves. Rape alone is punishable by death in Islam so all Boko haram has been sentenced to death Insha Allah, thousands of our Mujahedin in the civilian JTF have been helping the military to destroy those unfortunate infidels called Boko haram, because they have no place in Islam and the World!!!
Taqiya
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Military24: 7:01am On Dec 22, 2019 |
For that of Nigeria ! Buhari did not come to work, buhari sole aim is total islamisation of Nigeria!
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gaetano: 7:15am On Dec 22, 2019 |
OK. But when is Washington going to lunch nuclear weapons to northern Nigeria? I can't wait.
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scribble: 7:38am On Dec 22, 2019 |
MoIbrahim:
All this jobbers looking for aids and grant. Soon he'll receive more dollars to "save Nigerian Christians" and/or "rebuild churches".
No we need the Fulani and their ers to go back to whatever forest in Sudan etc that they crawled out from.
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scribble: 7:39am On Dec 22, 2019 |
MelloJelly:
The fucking irony. Islam is from arabs and they are far worse than whites. they are so retarded
This is why they are olodos anyway, anytime
Illiterate okada pushers
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TooMuchStuff: 7:49am On Dec 22, 2019 |
Buhari posture is the covering that Jihadists are using to keep killing the inhabitants of Christians communities across the middlebelt
Demonic worshippers of GAY god won't succeed
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ivandragon: 8:00am On Dec 22, 2019 |
Those Fulanis carrying out attacks are the elements of BH who felt that as long as a Muslim was in power at the centre, then the purpose of BH was no longer needed. As such, they left BH & took their activities further inland.
It's one of the reasons why BH could not hold more territory inland of Nigeria because they had lost key parts of the structure that would have enabled them hold more territory.
The FG's refusal to recognise this link is what allowed it spread so much at the time.
However, things have settled a bit mainly due to the fact that a continued spread using violence cannot be sustained anymore... Tactics have to change.
I also find it suspicious that in all the state of the nation/speeches the apex head of this 'regime' has made to Nigerians (about 4...)... It has called Niger Deltan's miscreants, IPOB terrorists, Nigerian youths lazy, Nigerians doing business in foreign lands criminals, politicians useless, BH evil... Yet, not a single word to classify the atrocities of the rouge Fulanis other than making excuses & telling Nigerians to give up their lands to them to avoid bloodshed... Same people he said were not Nigerians...
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helinues: 8:20am On Dec 22, 2019 |
Military24: Tropical yaruba moslem terrorist! Moslems can never rule this world! They want to rule the world using jihads(Al qaeda, Taliban, Boko haram, Fulani herdsmen etc). In as mush as the world remain, moslems world'll ever remain second class and CHRISTIANS domination'll continue!
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nototribalist: 8:34am On Dec 22, 2019 |
I was looking for this article since yesterday, WSJ want me to pay before I read on their website.
Buhari only came to put Fulanis ahead of everybody. That has been his goal all these years of trying to be a president
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Masterclass32: 8:46am On Dec 22, 2019 |
The long term goal is eventual annihilation of Christianity in Nigeria and to take back their grand father's 'land'. What they don't realise is that they had already failed with an epic failure even before they started.
Islamization of Nigeria will NEVER happen.
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tstx(m): 8:49am On Dec 22, 2019 |
Typical of Ndi Oyibo.. Always spewing trash about the African Continent... Very inconsiderate people
There's no war against Africa's Christians
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