An Islamic State Christmas killing of 11 hostages in Nigeria threatens to flare up religious tensions

A video released by Islamic State on Dec. 26 which claims to show the killing of 11 Christian hostages
in northern Nigeria threatens to spark religious tensions in the
country and compounds the political problems of president Muhammadu
Buhari.
The Islamic State sub-group called Islamic
State West Africa Province (ISWAP) said the “beheading” of the hostages
was part of its campaign to “avenge” the killing of IS leader Abu Bakr
al-Baghdadi in a US military raid in Syria last October.
ISWAP is a 2016 breakaway faction of the
Nigeria-founded Boko Haram terrorist group. Until last year when more
radical leaders took over, ISWAP was led by Abu Mus’ab al-Barnawi, the
son of Boko Haram’s founder, Mohammed Yusuf. As well as Nigeria, it
operates in Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Mali, all of which are Nigeria’s
neighboring countries. In December, the group killed four aid workers
from the NGO Action Against Hunger who they originally abducted in
Damasak in Nigeria’s northeastern Borno state in July.
In
a bid to ward off talk of religious disputes getting widespread,
president Buhari said Nigerians shouldn’t allow terrorists split the
populace along religious lines. “We should, under no circumstance, let
the terrorists divide us by turning Christians against Muslims because
these barbaric killers don’t represent Islam and millions of other
law-abiding Muslims around the world,” he said in a statement.
Nigeria,
whose 200 million-strong population is split almost evenly between
Christians and Muslims, is particularly sensitive to the risks of
religious tensions being ignited after decades of on-and-off conflict
especially in the country’s middle belt region over the last couple of
decades. Most recently the region has been subject to vicious clashes
between migratory herdsmen and local farmers primarily over land use. As
the herdsmen are often Muslim and landowners widely believed to be
Christian, these clashes are regularly perceived as religious clashes.
Islamic State’s release of the video came days after
the United States government accused Nigeria of not protecting religious
freedom. The US State Department on Dec. 18 added Cuba, Nicaragua,
Nigeria, and Sudan on a Special Watch List (SWL) of governments that
“have engaged on or tolerated severe violations of religious freedom.”
Nigeria
and the other three countries now join Comoros, Russia and Uzbekistan
on the list. The designation was a triumph of American Christian right
groups that have been lobbying the Trump’s administration to appease its
evangelical base by taking up the fight of Christians across the globe.
Earlier,
Nigeria’s information minister Lai Mohammed rejected Nigeria’s new
designation and argued the Trump administration was acting on the basis
of a discredited narrative from “failed politicians and disgruntled
elements.”
“The deliberate effort to give religious
colouration to the farmers-herders clashes and the Boko Haram
insurgency, in particular, has undoubtedly helped to mislead the US into
concluding that the government is doing little or nothing to guarantee
religious freedom in the country,” said Mohammed.
The
video of ISWAP killing of Christians says otherwise. In fact, it
reinforced what some Nigerian Christian leaders have previously
claimed—that the government of Buhari had not done enough to curtail the
activities of various Islamic terrorist groups operating in Nigeria.
In
his reaction to the US designation of Nigeria amongst countries on SWL,
the president of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Samson
Ayokunle warned
“discrimination against Christians can result in another civil war
which Nigeria may not survive.” Through a spokesman CAN’s president
pointed to killings of Christians in states in the middle-belt region as
atrocities that could not have gone unnoticed by the United States. The
Christian group alleges that while Muslims have also been killed, the
primary targets were Christians.
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