Angry Muslims Burn Churches in Nigeria 

By Gilbert da Costa 
VOA NEWS
Abuja
21 September 2006

The authorities in Nigeria's northern state of Jigawa
have imposed a nighttime curfew in the wake of a
violent protest by a group of Muslim youths in the
state capital. The rioters attacked Christians
following a blasphemous statement allegedly made by a
local Christian woman about Prophet Muhammad.

Hundreds of heavily armed anti-riot policemen are
patrolling the streets of Dutse, capital of the
northern Nigerian state of Jigawa, to contain rioting
by angry Muslim youths.

Police spokesman Haz Iwendi, who blamed those he
referred to as miscreants for the attacks, said the
police had taken steps to stop the violence.

"Yes, we had some violence there yesterday arising
from a statement allegedly made by a Christian woman
and a lot of miscreants took to the streets and burnt
down churches and shops belonging to Christians and
the IG [Inspector General of Police] has moved in and
he has asked the AIG [Assistant Inspector General] of
Abuja to proceed to Dutse and take over the place and
he has also directed units of police mobile teams from
Katsina and Kano, to go there and beef up security and
restore normalcy," he said.

At least 10 churches, 20 shops as well as homes of
Christians were reportedly attacked and set ablaze by
the angry protestors, who claimed a local Christian
woman had made a blasphemous statement about Prophet
Muhammad. The woman was said to have reacted to
inflammatory language denigrating Jesus Christ by a
Muslim man.

Eyewitnesses say, at least six people are being
treated at the local hospital, one of them is said to
be seriously ill.

The state governor, Ibrahim Turaki, was attacked when
he tried to calm the mob and had to be hurriedly taken
away. Some of the governors bodyguards sustained
severe injuries.

Africa's most populous nation and top oil producer is
regularly plagued by violence.

A dozen northern states introduced Islamic sharia law
in 2000, alienating Christian minorities in the
predominantly Muslim north and stoking spates of
inter-religious violence that killed thousands of
people.

At least 15,000 people have been killed in communal,
ethnic and religious violence in Nigeria since the
return to civil democracy seven years ago.





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