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Underlining the failure of the Nigerian government to stop the violent rampage of Boko Haram, a Catholic bishop has called for Western military intervention. The Muslim militant group’s increasingly deadly assaults and expanded recruitment from countries across North Africa mean “a concerted military campaign is needed by the West to crush Boko Haram,” said Bishop Oliver Dashe Doeme of Maiduguri, capital of the troubled Borno State.

“The West should bring in security—land forces—to contain and beat back Boko Haram,” he said in an interview on Jan. 19 with the international Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need.

Boko Haram leaders say they seek to overthrow the Nigerian government and create an Islamic state. More than 11,000 Nigerians have died since Boko Haram launched an insurgency in 2009, engaging in a campaign of terror, mass killings and abductions, carrying out suicide bombings, burning villages and forcing hundreds of thousands of people to flee. It is feared that as many as 2,000 people may have been killed when militants captured Baga in early January, razing thousands of homes in their path.

The number of Nigerians displaced because of the insurgency may be close to one million, according to the International Organization for Migration.

Bishop Doeme said that of the 125,000 Catholics in his diocese, almost 70,000 have fled their homes and about 1,000 have been killed. Boko Haram militants have destroyed more than 50 churches and chapels in his diocese, he added, and more than 200 churches have had to be abandoned in the past five years.

The Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project, an academic group that uses media reports to monitor violence in conflicts, reported in January that Boko Haram was responsible for nearly half of all civilian deaths in African conflict zones in 2014.

Cardinal John Olorunfemi Onaiyekan of Abuja said Boko Haram is committing “crimes against humanity.” He complained that despite the seriousness of these acts, Nigerian government leaders “continue to do nothing and live as if nothing has happened. It’s not that [they] lack the means: the money is there and lots of it. What is missing is the sense of responsibility on the part of those who govern,” he told Vatican Radio on Jan. 19.

Bishop Doeme said the Nigerian military is corrupt, complicit and inept. “Among the soldiers, there were sympathizers with Boko Haram; some of them were even Boko Haram members; and many of them just ran away” during the militants attack on Baga. The bishop said the government also knows who is financially supporting the group from abroad.

Boko Haram militants are recruiting people in neighboring countries “enticing them with money, they pay in dollars. And the people, who are without work, follow them,” Cardinal Onaiyekan said.

African nations need to cooperate, he said, and prayers are urgently needed “so that our government is able to recognize the seriousness of the situation, so that we can launch not just a military [response], but also a path of political dialogue.

“That way we can slowly begin to change the mentality of these people who commit these atrocities, not just against our country but against human life,” the cardinal said.

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.
Paul Ferris
9 years 9 months ago
A few years ago I met a priest from Kenya who came to work in a parish in the United States, a father Appolonera. I liked him very much but could not understand his negative attitude toward Muslims. Years later, I now understand. And that is not to say that most Muslims are not peace loving.

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