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Ethiopian Christians Flee After Church Burnings

ICC Note

“I don’t care who started the violence. The fact is that thousands of local Muslims, my neighbors, have participated in it. That’s why I don’t see a future for me and other Christians in this town anymore.”

03/20/2011 Ethiopia (RNW)-Evangelical churches and homes have been burnt down by mobs of Muslims in the southwestern Jimma region of Ethiopia. The attacks have left at least one person dead and 7,000 displaced. “This is a strategically planned attack by an extremist Islamic group.”

“It is a miracle that we are standing here talking,” says Wolde Giorgis, a primary school teacher and devote Christian, standing in front of the burnt remainders of what used to be the largest Pentecostal church of Asendabo, a town in the southwest of Ethiopia that is predominantly Muslim.

Wolde says to fear for his life. “I will leave this place as soon as possible, like so many Christians already did. I don’t know what will be next: first they burn our churches and houses. Are they going to kill us now?”

69 churches burnt down

Evangelical churches and homes of Christians in Asendabo, about 300 kilometers southwest of capital Addis Ababa, and other towns in the Jimma region were torched earlier this month. Thousands of them have fled their hometowns to safer areas.

More than 46 churches belonging to the Pentecostal Kale Hiwot (Word of Life) Church and 23 belonging to other Christian groups have been burnt down, says Temesgen Wolde, coordinator of the Kale Hiwot department in Jimma City. His church shelters eighty refugee Christians in a tent.

Flushing Qurans down the toilet

The attacks began after Muslims accused the Kale Hiwot Church in Asendabo of flushing Qurans down the toilet and using its pages as toilet paper. “Within a short period of time a large group of Muslims attacked our Church screaming ‘Allahu Akhbar’,” Temesgen says.

Not religious but political

According to Teshome Degefu, mayor of Asendabo, the conflict is not religious but political. “An opposition group of Muslim extremists called Kawarja has incited the attacks,” he says.

“I tried to stop the angry crowd, but they wouldn’t listen,” says Imam Hadjima Mehamed Adem. The head of the Tofik Mosque in Asendabo says he is sure that his followers were not among the attackers.

No future for Christians

Wolde Giorgis says he does not believe that will happen: “I don’t care who started the violence. The fact is that thousands of local Muslims, my neighbors, have participated in it. That’s why I don’t see a future for me and other Christians in this town anymore.”

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