Baroness Cox: Rich Nigerian Churches Should Do More To Help Boko Haram Victims

Baroness Cox said Christians in Nigeria's south should do more to help believers in the north.

Christians in the south of Nigeria are failing to help persecuted fellow believers in the north, according to a veteran humanitarian campaigner.

The Boko Haram Islamist insurgency has left around 20,000 dead and caused massive disruption in northern Nigeria and surrounding countries, with around 2.6 million people displaced.

Baroness Cox, who has made numerous aid missions to the country, told World Watch Monitor: "My personal view is that many of those churches are immensely wealthy and I would hope they could do more to help those who are suffering in the north, particularly the internally displaced people who are left.

"They could work with churches [in the north] who know the needs to reach those most in need.

"From a Christian point of view, St Paul said that where one part of the Body of Christ suffers, we all suffer. There is an obligation to help our Christian brothers and sisters."

Lady Cox said that southern churches sent occasional consignments of aid, but a tribal rather than national outlook often prevailed resulting in a "disconnect at every level" between Christians in the north and those in the south.

She also said Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari is failing to adequately respond to the increasingly frequent attacks by groups of armed Fulani herdsmen on Christian villages and leaders in the country's Middle Belt. She suggested that the lack of "robust reprisals" could be linked to him being an ethnic Fulani.

Nigeria's Federal Government has pledged to establish cattle ranches to resolve the frequent clashes between herdsmen and farmers, which President Buhari has attributed to "poverty, injustice and the lack of job opportunities". Other analysts cite climate change and desertification as factors. However, researchers such as Open Doors' Yonas Dembele says the attacks amount to the ethnic cleansing of Christians.

Lady Cox said the attacks by Fulani herdsmen were "deeply disturbing" and had an ideological aspect because eye-witnesses reported them shouting "Allahu Akbar" as they carried out their attacks. She said the herdsmen passed through the Sharia-run states in the north without carrying out attacks. She suggested Boko Haram might have a role in training them, adding: "There's a lot of concern [the cleansing by Fulani militias is] an extension of the Islamisation of Nigeria."

News
Danny Kruger: Britain should be 'confidently Christian'
Danny Kruger: Britain should be 'confidently Christian'

Reform MP Danny Kruger has spoken of the need for Britain to once more assert itself as a  country with a long and rich Christian Heritage.

400 girls 'missing' thanks to sex-selective abortions
400 girls 'missing' thanks to sex-selective abortions

Sex selective abortions appear to be taking place within the Indian community, data suggests.

Community pantries mark a million visits as new research highlights impact on food insecurity
Community pantries mark a million visits as new research highlights impact on food insecurity

Community pantries across the UK have recorded their one millionth visit, as new research suggests the membership-based food model is helping thousands of households reduce food insecurity, cut costs and prevent them from falling into extreme hardship.

Christmas was a mix of joy and hostility for Christians in India
Christmas was a mix of joy and hostility for Christians in India

India has witnessed a blend of joyful Christmas celebrations in many parts of the country, alongside reports of hate, hostility, and attacks on Christians this season, particularly in northern and central regions.