Winners Chapel set ablaze in Kaduna

Semiu Salami
Semiu Salami
David-Oyedepo

A branch of Living Faith Church popularly called Winners Chapel in Giwa, Headquarters of Giwa Local Government Area of Kaduna State has been set ablaze by two unidentified arsonists.

In a terse statement issued on Thursday in Abuja by the President of Tarayyar Masihiyawan Nijeria (Hausa, Fulani and Kanuri Christians), General Ishaku Ahmed Dikko (retd) and Director of National Issues in Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) entitled: “Presidential Elections 2015: Signs of what to expect”, it called on security agencies to act fast to avoid violence in the area.

According to them, the Christians in the North, particularly the Hausa, Fulani and Kanuri speaking Christians, who are indigenous in these States and live within and among their kith and kin “are in serious jeopardy.”

The statement claimed that the action surprised the Christian Community, especially the Church members, as there was no tension or any sign of it between Christians and Muslims in the town.

“It is however, a known fact that the people of the Local Government have not been friendly with the Christian Community even though over 90 percent of them are of the same Huasa – Fulani indigenes,” it said.

The group said that the incidence actually became more worrisome when no effort was made by a passersby to assist in putting out the fire. “In fact, it was a Fulani herdsman that saw the fire and reported at the Police Station. Only one policeman and a Christian volunteer that ran to the scene and attempted to put out the fire but of course could not achieve anything.

​”This situation and the circumstances surrounding the incidence are a cause of serious concern. If this can happen more than a week to the Presidential Elections, what shall we expect during or after the elections?

“Is this a sign of what to expect or a dress rehearsal of a repeat of 2011 Post – Election Violence? This is a wakeup call to the Federal, State and Local Government Authorities,especially the Security Agencies. ”

The statement asserts that Christians in the North, particularly the Hausa, Fulani and Kanuri speaking Christians, who are indigenous in these States and live within and among their kith and kin are in serious jeopardy.

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