Recent religious fighting between the Nigerian
security agencies and Muslim fundementalists in northern Nigeria has
resulted in the death of more than 200 people, and the threat of more
unrest is still very real. A few years ago, a VGR library in the area
was burned to the ground by a similar conflict.
Tensions are always high in northern Nigeria. Scarce natural resources,
poverty, and sharp cultural and religious difference fuel routine outbreaks of
violence. Christians are often persecuted by the Muslim majority, which has
recently resulted in the burning of Christian churches and armed mobs patrolling
city streets. The Muslim militia claims that the latest violent confrontation is
a consequence of Christians burning two local mosques, but Nigerian authorities
have a different version of the causes as reported by the media.
More than 200 ethnic groups generally live peaceably in Nigeria, although
civil war left one million people dead between 1967 and 1970, and there have
been bouts of religious violence since then.
Brother Andrew Alasa, VGR Office Manager in Lagos, is in contact with the
believers in the north and will keep us posted of their wellbeing. So far they
are all reported safe, but they have been instructed to stay indoors for their
protection. The believers in Nigeria humbly ask for your prayers as they deal
with the dangers just outside their front doors.