One of the cruelest and most horrific incidents of Nigerian Christians being attacked and murdered by Muslim extremists is coming to light. The latest news reveals the brutal murder of a woman and her bridesmaids on the way to her wedding.
The African-based Morning Star News, which focuses on Christian persecution, reports that Martha Bulus and her two bridesmaids were stopped by the Muslim terrorist group, Boko Haram, on December 26, as they made their way from Gwoza, Borno state to Bulus’ hometown in Adamawa state for her wedding. The bridal party was ordered from the vehicle, and after identifying themselves as Christians were beheaded, church leaders said. One of the young women was also the bride’s sister.
Bulus and her two bridesmaids “were not the only Christian victims that were killed on that day along the Maiduguri-Yola Highway,” Rev. Naga Williams Mohammed, chairman of the Borno State Chapter of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) told Morning Star News. “Eight other Christians were also killed on that spot at Gwoza, while two other Christian sisters were kidnapped and taken away by the Boko Haram group.”
Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states in northeast Nigeria have been “a hotbed for Boko Haram terrorists,” according to Morning Star News.
READ: 2019 bad year for Nigerian believers
Bulus was a member of St. Augustine Catholic Church in Maiduguri, according to the Rev. Francis Arinse, director of communications for the Catholic Diocese of Maiduguri. It was not known if her bridesmaids were also a member of the same church.
More Violence
More recent terrorist attacks in Nigeria include a report that more than 200 Muslim Fulani herdsmen attacked predominantly Christian villages in southern Kaduna state since Jan. 6, killing at least 35 people and kidnapping 58 others, including a mother and her 6-month-old baby.
Armed with AK-47s, the herdsmen on motorcycles rampaged through 10 villages in Chikun and Brinin Gwari counties, Christian leaders said. “Traumatized people displaced by the violence, dispossessed of their farmlands and homeless, later received calls demanding thousands of dollars in ransom for the release of their relatives,” stated Morning Star News in the article.
Pastor Habila Madama, a Christian leader in the affected areas, told the news agency that the “killing, maiming and kidnapping” of family members happened “without restraint by security agencies or the military.”
“The herdsmen have destroyed our farmlands and left us with nothing,” Madama said. “These Muslim Fulani herdsmen will usually come with their cattle, forcefully take over our farms, and destroy crops ready for harvests.”
Help Requested
The organization, Save the Persecuted Christians (STPC) is calling for a US special envoy to be sent to Nigeria and the Lake Chad region because of the extreme violence against Christians there.
“What is afoot in Nigeria is jihad,” said STPC President and CEO Frank Gaffney. “It’s a concerted, systematic, organized and increasingly genocidal effort to remove from Nigeria – and most especially from the areas of Nigeria that are resource-rich – Christians who are by definition under the Sharia…seen as enemies of Islam and people that can be eliminated or otherwise removed at will.”
Gaffney said the conflict is not just between farmers and herdsmen, “as some naively would like to believe, but an Islamic war being waged against Christians in Nigeria.” He said the persecutors must be held accountable, as well as those who enable them.
Across the globe in 2020, Christians are organizing prayer efforts specifically for the status of Christ followers in Nigeria and beyond. President Donald Trump has ordered the State Department to also make it a top priority this year.
–Metro Voice and wire services