Radical Islamists Stab Pastor to Death As Locals Go on Rampage

Christians are caught in the crosshairs of Muslim infighting.
Share:

A flare-up of violence in Bangui, the capital of the Central African Republic (CAR), on Feb, 7 left a pastor dead and his church demolished.

According to the U.N., at least three people were killed and 26 injured, including civilians and combatants.

Meanwhile, various outbreaks of infighting between Muslim factions has caused thousands of Christians to flee their homes in the north of the country.

Pastor Jean-Paul Sankagui of the Eglise du Christ en Centrafrique (ECC) was killed by supporters of local militia leader Youssouf Sy (also called the “Big-man”) at his home in the restive PK5 neighborhood, following a military operation there by the CAR army and UN peacekeeping forces.

The stated aim of the operation was to interrogate Sy, but he was killed, together with an associate. The President of the ECC, Jean Noel Ndanguere, told World Watch Monitor that in retaliation, Sy’s supporters went on the rampage, injuring and killing people and destroying property. Sankagui’s church was set on fire, as was the Apostolic and St. Mathias Church.

A few weeks before, on the night of Jan. 14, a tent set up as a temporary place of worship by the Baptist Union of Churches’ Gbaya Dombia congregation was also burnt down. This tent had itself been set up after the church’s previous building was burnt down in 2014.

Twice in the past week, armed individuals also entered the local hospital with the aim of killing patients. A senior U.N .official condemned the attacks.

PK5 is part of the 3rd district in Bangui and the last remaining predominantly Muslim neighborhood. According to Gbaya Dombia’s pastor, Muslims said Christians would not be allowed a meeting place in the area until Muslims have returned to the area and reopened their mosques.

Return to Recently-Vacated IDP Camp

Hundreds of internally displaced people (IDPs), shaken by the renewed violence, have returned to the refugee camp at Bangui M’Poko Airport, where they sought refuge when the violence first erupted in 2013. Since December last year, people had slowly begun to return to their abandoned homes.

“The incident took place following a military operation. Then militiamen started shooting. They burnt down our houses. These armed men must be disarmed,” one IDP told local media, on condition of anonymity.

While the army, with the support of 10,000 UN peacekeepers, has been able to help stabilize the situation in the capital, in more rural areas, rebel groups are holding the local populations hostage. Only a few days before the incident in Bangui, up to 9,000 people, many of them Christians, were forced out of their homes after rebel infighting in the northern town of Bocaranga—part of the Ouham Pende province.

The U.N. reported that people fled into the bush after violence erupted between two unnamed armed groups. In the clashes, international NGO compounds were attacked and pillaged and at least one office was burnt down. Shops and markets were “systematically pillaged,” as was a church, said the U.N.

On Feb. 2, clashes between two Séléka factions over a gold mine near Bambari caused renewed displacement, swelling numbers and worsening the already-difficult conditions in IDP camps there.

Background

The Central African Republic is currently undergoing an internationally supervised transition. Last year, presidential elections were won by Faustin-Archange Touadera, the last prime minister under former president Francois Bozizé, who was deposed in a coup by a coalition of Muslim-dominated rebel groups led by Michel Djotodia under the Séléka banner.

It was the beginning of a civil war that partitioned the country between Christian and Muslim populations; anti-Balaka (“anti-machete”) vigilantes continue to dominate the south and west, while Séléka elements, with the ethnic Fulani and others, dominate the north and east.

According to a report from the US Commission on International Religious Freedom, most fighting took place for control of land and resources. {eoa}

This article originally appeared on World Watch Monitor.

+ posts
Share:

Related topics:

See an error in this article?

Send us a correction

To contact us or to submit an article

Click and play our featured shows

Hillsong Settles Assault Case Against Former Staff Member

Hillsong has settled an assault case against one of their former staff members, Jason Mays, in the assault against Anna Crenshaw.   According to ChurchLeaders, the Australian-based megachurch has settled with a former Hillsong college student, Crenshaw. She filed a...

University Protests ‘An Externally Funded and Organized Effort’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iyNFI-kXpZ4 JERUSALEM, Israel – Within just a few weeks, anti-Israel protests have expanded to occupy U.S. campuses coast to coast. Given the overall coordination, officials are questioning whether these demonstrations go beyond a spontaneous student movement to a more well-funded outside...

Greg Locke Reveals Groundbreaking Plans for Church

In a live Sunday morning Facebook stream, Pastor Greg Locke revealed the plans for a new building at Global Vision. After seeing his ministry explode in the past few years, meeting under a tent because of the influx of people...

Man Claims ‘Possession’ Drove Him to Cannibalism

There have been heinous events throughout history. Satan’s perversion of humanity and his influence in committing atrocities is not new, but today’s culture feels as though it has been saturated by criminal acts and are viewed as mundane by modern...

National Day of Prayer: What Are You Praying For?

Today is national day of prayer. We encourage you to join Charisma Media in praying God’s blessings over our families, our co-workers, our neighborhoods and our country on this most blessed day. Breaking News. Spirit-Filled Stories. Subscribe to Charisma on YouTube now!...

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 97 98 99 100
Scroll to Top