Details of a massacre of dishes of Christians in the Restive Middle Belt of Nigeria, Beliebed to Have Occurred at The Hands of Genocidal Fulani Jihadists, Began Surfacing Over The Weekend As The Nation’s The Holiest Season in Christianity and the Anniversary of The Mars of The Mosts of The Mosts of The Mosts of The Mosts of The Mars Mosts of the Mosts of the Mosts of the Mards of the Mards of the Mards of the Mosts of the History.
On April 14, 2014, the jihadist terrorist organization Boko Haram kidnapped almost 300 schoolgirls of the Christian Chibok community in the state of northern Borno, tending them as slaves with little significant government action in response. Eleven years later, about 90 of the girls remain missing, many indoctrinated in the jihadist ideology and forced to raise the results of the boys of their systematic violation by the radical Islamist group.
The Nigerian newspaper LeadershipLasting the government’s inaction to save girls, he informed that until Monday, 96 girls remain missing – Somehow, five more than the 91 reported on the anniversary of the ten years of the kidnappings in 2024. Multiple rounds of rescue attempts, some successful ones have occurred during the last decade, although from the notes of the girls notes notes notes are not the pads of notes that are not the notes of notes notes of notes that are not the notes that do not come in the girls Girls in the girls of the girls of the girls of the girls notes notes notes notes are not not the notes in the girls in the girls in the girls of the girls. Kidnapping or some as recently as seven years after his kidnapping. The terrorists spent years publishing videos showing the Christian girls wrapped in Islamic veils, claiming to have converted and urging others to do so.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S-l4w65mzom
Several Nigerian officials marked the anniversary with an event in London on Monday along with the United Nations, highlighting the continuous threat of radical Islamic terrorism in the country due to the absence of girls. According to the reports, the event will have a photographic exhibition in honor of missing girls and the comments of the defenders for their launch.
“This event is more than I remember,” the Metala Muhammed (MMF) Foundation said in a statement, a Nigerian humanitarian group. “It is a clear call to revive global outrage, pursue justice without commitment and restore dignity and opportunity for girls and women marked by war.”
In an article about Monday’s anniversary, Leadership He regretted that Chibok’s kidnapping created a “new normality” for Nigerian Christians as later mass kidnappings continued, turning girls into sex slaves and forcing them to raise the resulting boys for the cause. The Nigerian newspaper Punch Similarly, he concluded that the Nigerian government had forgotten girls, asking: “Does the government know or care?”
“This is a blight for the Government and security agencies, including the self -denominated Department of State Services. The Government has failed in its main responsibility to assure citizens,” the newspaper condemned. “While a citizen is in captivity, so much time is the country in captivity.”
Boko Haram, an affiliate from the Islamic State, is still a threat in the north of the country. In the central central belt – Where most Christian to the south of the nation meet the Muslim majority of the north – Radical jihadists commonly known as “Fulani Pastors” have fought an ongoing campaign to erase the indigenous Christian populations of the region with little resistance to government. Fulanis attacks intensified significantly under former President Muhammadu Buhari, himself an ethnic guy whose government promised the myth that Christian massacres were fed by climate change.
Fulani attacks – Often with mass violation, the burning of churches and houses, and machete massacres – They have continued incessantly under the successor chosen by Buhari, Bola Tinubu. Multiple attacks have been documented in the last two weeks as Christians have prepared for Holy Week, the period that marks the end of Lent and premieres at the most sacred party of Easter.
Citing local officials, Christian Outlet Morning Star News documented a massacre on April 7 by killing nine Christians in an ambush aimed at scaring Christians to live in their indigenous communities. The incident occurred in the state of plateau, in the heart of the interior of the nation, where the Fulanis have increasingly stolen the land of Christians during the last decade. Shortly before April 2 and 3, local Christians reported a separate attack that killed about 60 people in the state aimed at seven different villages. According to reports, a town, Hurti, lost more than 40 or its residents. Christian Daily International reported that, in addition to those killed, more than 1,000 lost their homes. A place described Fulani gangs or jihadists on motorcycles that assault the Hurti village, burning hundreds of houses and laughs.
Young leader Joseph Chudu Yonkpa told Morning Star that the threat is constant for Christians trying to live in their ancestral lands.
“The atrocities committed by Fulani’s militias against Christians here extend beyond ambush and attacks, since their cattle have passed in our farms with impunity, which makes innumerable families perform and destroy,” he explained. “The continuous murders and the destruction of our Christians” The means of livelihood are deliberate attempts to convert our Christian communities into a law. “
Previous thesis two attacks, the Nigerian newspaper Punch They reported that another 52 people were killed in an attack by Fulani subject on March 28.
The governor of the State of Plateau, Caleb Mutfwang, denounced the murders in comments this week as an attempt to genocide against their Christian components instigated by unknown organizers.
“I can say honestly that I cannot find any explanation that is not the genocide sponsored by terrorists,” he said in an interview with Nigeria’s Channels Television, according to Punch.
“The question is, who are the people behind the organizers of this terrorism?” Hello Ash. “We must get to the point where we know the sponsors because it is not just the work of the common people.”
“This is sponsoring from somewhere, and I am sure that in the next few days, security agencies will work together, not in crossed purposes but in unison, to be able to get the intelligence of requirement that Willes puts on this,” he promised. “
On Sunday, Mutfwang visited one of the villages most devastated by jihadist murders, the city of Bokkos. While they speak firmly against the jihadists of Fulani in some interviews, their comments to the people limited themselves to the topics about “increase the occasion” and promises to improve the reception of mobile phones and the Internet in the area.
“This attack is to stay in poverty. This attack is to enslave your minds, become slaves in your own land,” the victims touched. “I want to see the youth of this village to rise to the occasion. Young people from any community are the strength of the community and it is time for us to put aside our differences … We live as one people.”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tpvpsj-m7ma
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