Burkina Faso: 4 killed in
attack on Catholic church
(file photo) Catholics attend Mass in Kaya, Burkina Faso, near where Sunday's attack took place (SESAME PICTURES) |
A Bishop in Burkina Faso says Christians reject a growing
spiral of violence, following an attack by heavily-armed gunmen on Catholics
during Mass, which killed 4 people and injured 2 others.
By Devin Watkins
The latest in a string of terrorist attacks on Christians
took place on Sunday morning in northern Burkina Faso.
According to local media, armed men raided the Catholic
Church in the town of Toulfe and opened fire during Mass, killing 4 of the
faithful and injuring 2 others.
Bishop Justin Kientega, of Ouahigouya, described it as “a
terrorist attack”.
A local resident said the attack caused panic in the
village, causing residents to seek cover in their homes or in the bush.
Spiral of violence
Last week, attackers killed 4 Catholics taking part in a
religious procession in Zimtenga. Earlier in May, gunmen murdered a priest and
5 parishioners in Dablo.
An attack on a Protestant church in Silgadji in late April
killed 6 people.
No one has claimed responsibility for the violence, but
suspicion has fallen on Islamic militants. The government has laid the blame on
unnamed terrorist groups operating throughout the Sahel region. Mali-based
Islamic extremists frequently carry out attacks in neighboring Burkina Faso and
Niger.
The upswing in anti-Christian violence is threatening to
overturn traditionally peaceful relations between Muslims and Christians in
Burkina Faso.
Christians reject inter-religious conflict
Bishop Theophile Nare, of the neighboring Kaya Diocese, told
Vatican News that Christians do not want to be locked in a spiral of violence,
despite growing insecurity in the region.
“I see this as part of jihadists’ strategy, which is to
inflame tensions between [the Christian and Muslim] communities through their
actions,” he said. “I think the driving vision is to spark war that is
inter-ethnic, inter-religious, and inter-communal.”
But Christians, said Bishop Nare, want to reject the trap of
violence that sets Christianity and Islam against one another.
“This is the work of a radicalized group of Muslims,” he
said.
According to the Africa Centre for Strategic Studies, attacks
in the Sahel region have increased from 3 in 2015 to 137 in 2018.
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