Nigeria: Buhari regime condemned after killing of female Christian preacher

Nigerian President Muhammadu BuhariReuters

The Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) has condemned the Muhammadu Buhari administration over increasing violence against non-Muslims and warned Christians to defend themselves following the killing at the weekend of a female Christian preacher.

Eunice Elisha, a pastor for the Redeemed Christian Church of God, was hacked to death in the Gbazango area of Kubwa, Abuja, by suspected Muslim fanatics, while preaching on the morning on 9 July.

Premium Times reported that shocking photos of the attack show Elisha's battered body lying in a pool of blood, next to her megaphone. 

No group has claimed responsibility for the murder, but police said they had arrested suspects.

On Monday, the wife of Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, Dolapo, visited Elisha's family.

CAN said the attack was "yet another religious, hatred-motivated gruesome murder" that was growing under the Buhari administration.

"The discrimination against non-Muslims in Nigeria under the Buhari Administration is assuming a dangerous dimension that should not be left to the vagaries of time and circumstance to resolve," the statement warned.

"Nigeria is dancing a macabre dance of death, both for the nation and for its citizens," the organisation added.

"The Christian Association of Nigeria commiserates with the families affected by these mindless orgies of death and destruction as well as with the entire Christian community in Nigeria," it went on. "We pray that God in His mercy shall comfort and strengthen the families of all the Nigerians affected in these unwarranted murders unleashed upon the nation by religious extremists. The recurring decimal of violence and murder of innocent Nigerian citizens on the basis of religious intolerance demands specific and relevant response from all concerned citizens in the country more so when the government in power seems to have adopted an attitude of lukewarm response to the evils being perpetrated in Nigeria in the name of religion."