Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Women, Children, Entire Villages of Christians Massacred by Muslims in Nigeria

The lack of interest in the massacres of our brothers and sisters is frightening.

The Archbishop said: 'It was not a good sight at all. The villagers had no chance whatsoever. They were slaughtered. I could see machete wounds in the necks of children. Kids from age zero to teenagers, all butchered from the back, macheted in their necks, their heads. Deep cuts in the mouths of babies. The stench. People wailing and crying. Some have lost their voices. I could not stand it. From what I saw from a distance, it was over 100 killed in one village. I don’t know what sparked it off. I thought we were making headway after the previous crisis in January.

The Barnabas Fund reports: Three villages were attacked between 3am and 5am on Sunday morning by busloads of armed Muslim Fulani. The number killed is unknown but certainly several hundred have been murdered, including women and children and entire communities have been wiped out. In one village alone more than 100 have been killed and corpses of those attempting to flee are still being discovered. All the victims are reportedly non-Muslims. Some survivors only avoided being killed after they were wounded by pretending to be dead. Some of the information provided about the attack has come from them. It is reported that the Muslims who lived in those area had already evacuated before the attack.

From Bill Donohue:

MUSLIM MASSACRE OF CHRISTIANS



Catholic League president Bill Donohue calls into question media coverage of Muslim violence against Christians in Nigeria:



According to The Australian, “dozens of bodies lined the streets” of three Christian villages in northern Nigeria. “Other victims of the weekend’s Muslim fury jammed a local morgue, the limbs of slaughtered children tangled in a grotesque mess.” Children were scalped, “most had severed hands and feet,” and “officials estimate that 500 people were massacred in night-time raids by rampaging Muslim gangs.” According to one eyewitness media account, “They then set homes on fire and attacked men, women and children. Many were decapitated.”



Now here is how CNN is reporting the story. “Gangs of machete-wielding Muslims have been blamed for the weekend slaughter of hundreds of Christian villagers in Nigeria, but analysts say it would be wrong to assume the conflict was rooted in religion.” Of course: When Muslims massacre Christians, religion never has anything to do with it.



“Some analysts,” the story continues, “believe the weekend slaughter was a revenge attack for the killing of around 150 members of the Hausa Muslim community by Christian mobs in Kuru Karama south of Jos, in January 2010.” Well, let’s see. Back in January, a U.N. media outlet reported that Muslim and Christian leaders in Kuru Karama, a predominantly Muslim village, “met to make a pact with the police to defend any attacks by outsiders.” But guess what happened? “Several hours later youths armed with machetes attacked the village.” And we know who likes machetes.



Back to CNN. It cited an ugly Muslim-Christian incident in 2001 in the same area. What started the Muslim massacre back then? “A Christian woman had tried to cross the road through a group of Muslims during Friday prayers.” Yeah, that’ll do it every time.



It’s time to stop viewing Muslim-Christian violence through the lens of moral equivalency.

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