Home Faith International Organisation for Peace and Social Justice Crisis Conference says ‘Over 1000 Christians Have Been Killed in Nigeria By Armed Militia in 2019 Alone’

International Organisation for Peace and Social Justice Crisis Conference says ‘Over 1000 Christians Have Been Killed in Nigeria By Armed Militia in 2019 Alone’

International Organisation for Peace and Social Justice Crisis Conference says ‘Over 1000 Christians Have Been Killed in Nigeria By Armed Militia in 2019 Alone’

A report presented at the International Organisation for Peace and Social Justice crisis conference in London shows that over 1,000 Christians have been killed in 2019 alone. According to ChurchTimes.

The report by Humanitarian Aid Relief Trust has revealed that at least 1000 Christians have been killed by the Boko Haram insurgents since the beginning of 2019. 

The report was presented at the International Organisation for Peace and Social Justice crisis conference in London, according to ChurchTimes, a Christian based website.

Baroness Cox, Founder of HART, explained that herdsmen were largely responsible for the new wave of violence. 

Cox urged the United Kingdom Government to make its annual £300m donation to Nigeria conditional on the Nigerian Government’s taking determined action to stop the killings.

She said, “While the underlying causes of violence are complex, the asymmetry and escalation of attacks by well-armed Fulani militia upon predominantly Christian communities is stark, and must be acknowledged.

“It is too simplistic to label these atrocities as driven by desertification, climate change, or competition for resources.

Baroness Cox further insisted, as she addressed the Nigerian government on the safety of Christians in Nigeria, “Unless the UK and Nigerian governments are willing to address the massacre’s ideological roots, they will never be able to help the innocent victims being slaughtered on the killing fields of Plateau state, Benue state, Taraba state, Southern Kaduna, and parts of Bauchi state.

“To the extent that the Nigerian leadership abdicates its fundamental duty to look after its most vulnerable citizens, we suggest making UK foreign aid to Nigeria conditional on the successful protection of Christian communities.”