By BosNewsLife Africa Service with reporting by BosNewsLife’s Stefan J. Bos

Christians in Nigeria have suffered several attacks this year.
Christians in Nigeria have suffered several attacks this year.

ABUJA, NIGERIA (BosNewsLife)– Christians in northern and central Nigeria were mourning victims Sunday, December 26, after multiple attacks on churches and other sites on Christmas Eve claimed at least 38 lives in Plateau State and Borno State.

Christians said attacks began in the city of Jos in Plateau State, where a series of bombings killed over 30 people.  The areas targeted included predominantly Christian areas.

Two of the bombs went off near a large market where people were doing last-minute Christmas shopping.  A third hit a mainly Christian neighborhood of Jos, while the fourth was near a road that leads to the city’s main mosque, officials said.

Around 28 seriously injured people were admitted to the ECWA Evangel Hospital, while others were taken to Jos University Teaching Hospital, Christians said. Many victims reportedly lost limbs, while others had shrapnel removed from their bodies, according to rights investigators.

CHURCHES ATTACKED

Christmas Eve 320 miles (520 kilometers) away in Maiduguri, in Borno State, was marred when 30 men armed with knives and guns attacked the Victory Baptist Church dragging the pastor out of his home and shooting him to death, witnesses said.

Two young men from the choir who were rehearsing for a late-night carol service also were slain. The assailants also killed two people who were passing by the church, Christians said. The assailants reportedly only left after setting the church and pastor’s house ablaze.

Danjuma Akawu, the church’s secretary, told reporters that he managed to escape after he and others climbed over the church’s fence. “I cannot understand these attacks…”Why Christians? Why Christians? The police have failed to protect us,” he said in a statement.

Elsewhere in the city, Reverend Haskanda Jessu with the Church of Christ in Nigeria said that three men attacked his church an hour later, killing a 60-year-old security guard. Police blamed Islamic militants, including of the Boko Haram Islamist sect, for the attacks.

In published remarks, Anglican Archbishop of Jos, Benjamin Kwashi, urged Christians not to give up hope. “We must celebrate the birth of our redeemer. It is no small sacrifice  that Jesus paid with his becoming flesh, dying on the cross [and resurrecting from death] just to redeem me and all the world.”

‘FOLLOW CHRIST’

He said, Christians “are called by Christ to follow him; this is in spite of what is happening in the world, including Jos. We will celebrate Jesus; it’s a choice we have made and to do otherwise  is to submit to a defeated foe – Satan. Good will always win over evil.”

Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW), an advocacy group closely monitoring the situation, said the the bombings in Jos constitute “a significant escalation” in the violence in Plateau State, while the attacks in Maiduguri appear to herald “an unwelcome new dimension”
to the violence perpetrated by “extremist” groups.

“It is therefore vital that state and federal authorities work together  to urgently track down and prosecute the planners and perpetrators of this violence in both states, and to ensure that every citizen in this multi-religious and multi-ethnic nation is able to practice his or her religion without fear of attack, ” said CSW Advocacy Director Andrew Johnston. “Our thoughts and prayers are with the families of those who lost their lives in these appalling attacks.”

Nigeria, a country of 150 million people, is almost evenly split between Muslims in the north and the predominantly Christian south. The blasts happened in central Nigeria, in the nation’s “middle belt”, where anti-Christian violence has killed hundreds of people this year, rights groups say.

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