Bishop of Mamfe says Fr.
Ondari died “doing what he offered his life for”
File picture of Bishop of Mamfe, Andrew Nikea with some Mill Hill Missionaries. |
Cameroon’s Bishop of Mamfe Diocese, Andrew Nkea, has called
for a stop to killings of innocent people in his diocese and in the Anglophone
regions of Cameroon.
Africa Service, Radio Vatican – Vatican City
All fingers point to the government’s security forces.
According to Bishop Nkea, Fr. Cosmas Omboto Ondari, a Mill
Hill Kenyan missionary based in Mamfe Diocese was shot in front of St. Martin
of Tours Parish in Kembong, Cameroon.
“Eye Witness accounts say that he was killed by Government
Soldiers (Gendarmerie Nationale), who were shooting at random from their
passing vehicle. A certain Mr Johnson Ndip Nchot was also shot in front of his
house, a few meters from the Church building,” said Bishop Nkea.
Bishop Nkea explained that at about 3.00 pm local time, on
Wednesday 21 November 2018, Fr. Cosmas Ondari, a Mill Hill Missionary,
who was in front of the Church of the Parish of St. Martin of Tours, Kembong,
was shot and killed on the spot in cold blood. Fr. Ondari was the Assistant
Parish Priest of the St. Martin of Tours Parish since April 2017. It was to be
his first and last appointment.
Bom in Gucha, in Kenya on the 19 September 1985, Fr. Ondari
joined the Missionary Society of St. Joseph (Mill Hill) and was ordained on the
26 March 2017 in his home Diocese of Kisii, Kenya.
A priest who was close to the people even in their suffering
“Already in December 2017, when the security situation in
Kembong was very tense, Fr. Ondari and his Parish Priest Fr. Tiberius Vouni,
MHM, along with some of their parishioners, moved out from Kembong to Mamfe.
The village of more than 5000 people was almost completely abandoned, and many
houses were burnt down. In April 2018, in a bid to give hope to the desperate
population, many of whom were living in the bushes in horrendous conditions,
Fr. Ondari and his Parish Priest courageously opted to go back to Kembong so as
to encourage the people to return. Some of the people with whom they ran to
Mamfe went back and sought refuge in the closed down premises of the Catholic
School in Kembong. It was in this context that Fr. Ondari was brutally and
recklessly murdered,” narrated Bishop Nkea.
He died doing what he offered his life for
“I visited Kembong Parish on Thursday 22 November 2018, and
I personally counted 21 Bullet holes made on the Church building of Kembong
where at the time, the priest, the Catechist and many Christians were carrying
out various activities in the Mission compound. The blood of the murdered
priest was still clearly seen on the cemented entrance to the Church just at
the door. He died right in the house of God, and it is our prayer that the God
whom he served so well will welcome him into his eternal kingdom. I call on all
the Christians of the Diocese of Mamfe, especially the Christians of Kembong
Parish, to stay calm and be united in prayer. The forces of evil are on a
rampage against the Church of God, but as Christians, we believe in the promise
of Christ that the gates of the underworld will never prevail over the Church.
While we mourn with the Mill Hill Family and the Natural family of Fr. Ondari,
we trust that he died doing what he had offered his life for,” said Bishop
Nkea.
The Mill Hill Missionaries corroborated the circumstances
leading to the killing of Fr. Ondari saying, “Cosmas was standing outside his
Church while meeting (internally displaced persons). At that moment soldiers
entered the Church compound at high speed in an army vehicle. As they drove by,
they started shooting. At this, the refugees fled into the Church. Cosmas was
still outside when he was hit in the thigh and chest. He was taken to a
hospital, but on arrival there (was) pronounced dead,” said the Mill Hill
Missionaries on their website.
Kenyan family, Church and friends mourn Fr. Ondari
Back in the Kenyan village of Fr. Ondari, Sengera area of
Kisii, the Daily Nation of Kenya reports that the news has cast a very sombre
mood among family members and relatives of the slain priest saying they
received news of his death with absolute shock.
His father Charles Omboto said his son was on a missionary
mission when he was killed. Most parishioners described Fr. Ondari as a “very
spiritual” and a man fired by the missionary spirit, the Daily Nation reports.
Kisii’s Diocesan Bishop Joseph Mairura said the deceased
priest was dedicated to the work of the Church.
“He was a young priest fired with the missionary spirit, but
death has snubbed him at a time we knew he had much still left to do in
reaching out to lost souls,” Bishop Mairura told the Daily Nation.
The Anglophone crisis
Cameroon, a Central African nation of approximately 24.68
million people, is divided into 10 regions. Eight of these regions have French
as their national language, and two have English. The central government of Cameroon
is located in the francophone part of the country.
Tensions between the Anglophone regions and the rest of
Cameroon have been growing. For years, there have been complaints about the
marginalisation of Anglophone areas. The ‘collapse’ of the two-state federation
in 1972 is sometimes cited as the origin of the current conflict. Nevertheless,
matters came to a head in 2016 when citizens protested the increased number of
French-speaking teachers and judges being sent to their areas.
It is said about 400 civilians have died in the last year
alone.
United Nations says dialogue the only way forward
A spokesperson for the UN High Commissioner for Human
Rights, Ravina Shamdasani said in Geneva, this week, that dialogue was the best
solution going forward.
“We call on armed secessionists groups to refrain from the
use of violence. We urge the Government to respect and protect the rights of
all, to address the long-standing grievances of the communities in these
regions, including through dialogue, to promptly investigate all cases of
violations reportedly involving its security and defence forces, and to hold
perpetrators responsible, Shamdasani said.
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