Radical Islamic Attacks a “Tragic Paradox” according to Nigerian President
ICC NOTE: The Nigerian president called radical Islamic attacks a “tragic paradox” at a recent peace conference. Radical Islamist groups adhere to the Islamic faith and execute terrorist attacks upon the local population which have predominately been religious minorities. However, in many cases Muslims have been the victims of Islamic radicals as well especially to those deemed “secular” by such groups. Nigeria’s population is made up of mainly Christian and Muslim believers, yet both experience the pain and violence of attacks from Boko Haram who rape, kidnap, and murder the most vulnerable.
3/18/2016 Nigeria (Christian Post) – Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari, a Muslim, said at a major peace conference that the teachings of Islam forbid extremism in all forms, making the wave of radical Islamic attacks worldwide a “tragic paradox.”
“The tragic paradox of the global insurgency situation is that most of the atrocities committed by various insurgents all over the world today, are being carried out mainly by people who pretend to be Muslims, yet most of the victims and casualties are equally Muslims,” Buhari said Thursday at the opening of the International Islamic Conference on Peace and Nation Building in Abuja, according to Nigeria’s Daily Trust.
“To underscore their cruelty and godlessness, they particularly target the most vulnerable members of the society: children, women and the elderly.”
Buhari added that any group that preachers lawlessness and extremism is ‘irreligious and unacceptable’ to Islam, and urged religious leaders to stand up and oppose false teachings that motivate violent insurgents.
“No religion approves of such heinous crimes against humanity; definitely not Islam nor Christianity, the two to which most Nigerians belong. This is a tragedy which all normal people must rise up against,” Buhari added.
“Islam does not permit lawlessness. It frowns at extremism even in normal acts of worship. The emergence of any group advocating the contrary is therefore irreligious and unacceptable.”
While Nigeria’s population, divided roughly between Christians and Muslims, has for years coexisted peacefully, radical Islamic groups have risen up, carrying out massacres against Christians and attempting to tear the country apart.
The Islamic State-aligned Boko Haram has captured much of international news with its suicide bombings, mass shootings and kidnappings of thousands of women and children across Nigeria, but Christian farmers have also been killed by the thousands at the hands of radical Islamic Fulani herdsmen.
