The Guardian (USA)

Nigeria: gunmen kill dozens in ‘satanic’ attack on Catholic church

- Emmanuel Akinwotu and agencies

Gunmen launched an assault on a Catholic church in Ondo state in Nigeria during mass on Sunday, killing more than 50 people in a “satanic attack”, local officials and volunteers said.

The attackers targeted the St Francis Xavier Catholic Church in the town of Owo as the worshipper­s gathered on Pentecost Sunday, according to local officials. They gunned down parishione­rs and detonated an explosive device, local media reported.

Doctors, local officials and volunteers helping the injured said the death toll was at least 50, with dozens being treated for injuries in overwhelme­d local hospitals.

Ogunmolasu­yi Oluwole, state legislator, said children were among the dead. Videos appearing to be from the scene of the attack showed church worshipper­s lying in pools of blood while people around them wailed.

The governor of Ondo state, Arakunrin Oluwarotim­i Akeredolu, condemned the “vile and satanic attack” on Sunday and pledged to find the assailants.

Rev Augustine Ikwu, a secretary of the Catholic Church in Ondo, said in a statement that the attack had “left the community devastated”.

“We turn to God to console the families of those whose lives were lost,” he said.

The bishop and priests from the parish had survived the attack unharmed, he said.

Nigeria’s president, Muhammadu Buhari, whose government has been widely condemned for overseeing a sharp rise in insecurity across the country, also condemned the attack.

“No matter what, this country shall never give in to evil and wicked people and darkness will never overcome light,” he said.

The identity and motive of the attackers was not immediatel­y clear.

A doctor at a hospital in the southweste­rn town of Owo told Reuters at least 50 bodies had been moved to the main government hospital in Owo and to St Louis Catholic hospital.

Sunday Ajibola, a volunteer at one of the town’s hospitals, said he saw “nothing less than 50 dead bodies” and several others with injuries from bullets and explosives being treated by medics. Local hospitals were making urgent appeals for blood, he said.

The Vatican said Pope Francis was praying for the victims, who had been “painfully stricken in a moment of celebratio­n”. Adeyemi Olayemi, a lawmaker in Ondo, said the attack was believed to have been carried out by ethnic Fulani terrorists, sometimes referred to as bandits, who have staged relentless attacks predominan­tly in northern Nigeria but also in other parts of the country.

The groups emerged from a historic conflict between pastoralis­ts and local communitie­s over access to land and encroachme­nts on private farms,

and have carried out mass killings and kidnapping­s, exploiting a lack of rural security across the country.

Olayemi said the attack was likely to have been in retaliatio­n for recent restrictio­ns by the state government on grazing in Ondo, including in forests where the assailants have carried out attacks. The restrictio­ns were adopted after an upsurge in kidnapping­s in the state.

“We have enjoyed improved security since herdsmen were driven away from our forests by this administra­tion,” Olayemi said. “This is a reprisal attack to send a diabolical message to the governor.”

While much of Nigeria has struggled with security issues, Ondo has been one of the country’s more peaceful states until the last few years, when kidnapping­s and attacks linked to herder-farmer conflicts have increased.

Akeredolu said he was heading back to the state from the capital, Abuja, after the “unprovoked attack and killing of innocent people of Owo”.

“We shall commit every available resource to hunt down these assailants and make them pay,” he said in a statement.

 ?? Photograph: Rahaman A Yusuf/AP ?? Worshipper­s inside St. Francis Catholic Church in Owo Nigeria after more than 50 people were feared dead after an attack at the church.
Photograph: Rahaman A Yusuf/AP Worshipper­s inside St. Francis Catholic Church in Owo Nigeria after more than 50 people were feared dead after an attack at the church.
 ?? Photograph: Reuters ?? Security forces guard Ondo governor Rotimi Akeredolu as he visits the church attack site.
Photograph: Reuters Security forces guard Ondo governor Rotimi Akeredolu as he visits the church attack site.

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