Daily Dispatch

11 killed during Nigeria church shooting spree

‘Barbaric’ act linked to feud says police chief

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AT least 11 worshipper­s were shot dead at a church in southeast Nigeria on Sunday, with authoritie­s suggesting the bloodshed was due to a local feud.

Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari condemned the attack, describing the incident as “an appalling crime against humanity and unspeakabl­e sacrilege”.

Buhari said there was no justificat­ion whatsoever to target church worshipper­s and kill them in cold blood.

At around 6am at least one gunman opened fire at Saint Philip’s church in Ozubulu, near the city of Onitsha, unleashing terror on the congregati­on.

Chukwuma Emeka said he had just stepped out of the church to stretch his legs when I heard gunshots and screaming and people running inside.

“When the chaos subsided I went inside, I saw my fellow church members dead in a pool of their own blood and many others were screaming in pain.”

Attacks on churches are rare in southern Nigeria, where there is a predominan­tly Christian population. The country’s mainly-Muslim north has been gripped by a violent campaign by Boko Haram jihadists, who specialise in targeting religious centres.

There were varying accounts of what happened in Ozubulu. Witnesses said five gunmen in masks stormed the church, but police said the killing was the work of a lone shooter.

“So far, 12 persons have been confirmed dead and deposited in the mortuary here,” a worker at Nnamdi Azikwe University Teaching Hospital said.

Garba Umar, Anambra State police Commission­er, later said 11 people were killed while 18 were injured as a result of the shooting. Several worshipper­s with gunshot wounds were also receiving treatment at the hospital, the source said. Witnesses said they feared that up to 20 people may have died.

Umar said the attacker was a gunman who went on a shooting spree, killing and wounding worshipper­s. He said the violence was the result of a failed murder attempt, tied to a feud within the local community.

“The informatio­n at the disposal of the police is that the gunman had been hired to kill a particular family person believed to be among the worshipper­s,” he said. He said the governor of the state visited the scene and promised to pay the medical bills of the injured.

Local rights activist Emeka Umeagbalas­i claimed the gunman had gone to kill the son of a local chief but failed to find him at his home, Umeagbalas­i said.

The attackers then went to the church to hunt for him, but could not find the intended target and became angry, he said.

They opened “fire on parishione­rs and shot indiscrimi­nately”, he said, adding that the father of the intended target was shot and wounded.

Speaker of Nigeria’s House of Representa­tives Yakubu Dogara called the attack “barbaric . . . the height of wickedness”.

Hundreds of churches and mosques in Nigeria’s north have been attacked since 2009 when Boko Haram began a violent campaign to impose strict Islamic law.

The rebellion has killed at least 20 000 people. — AFP

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