Cardinal Anthony Olubunmi Okogie, the former Catholic archbishop of Lagos, sent a copy of the letter to the Punch newspaper, in which he denounced the president’s failure to stop the slaughter of Christians by Muslim Fulani herdsmen in central Nigeria.
“The number killed under your watch, Mr. President, provides more than convincing evidence that the government you lead has failed to secure our lives,” the cardinal wrote.
“If more than three years into your administration, you have been unable to stop these killings, why don’t you seriously consider the option of an honourable renunciation of the presidential seat?” he said.
Last weekend, heavily armed Fulani herdsmen opened fire on Christians in a number of villages in Plateau State of central Nigeria, killing some 200 and injuring hundreds more, as well as burning dozens of homes to the ground.
Shortly afterward, other Christian clerics denounced the latest attacks as an overt attempt to “Islamize” the Nigerian Middle Belt by targeting and eliminating Christians, while also accusing the Nigerian president of negligence.
Bishops Matthew Ishaya Audu of Lafia said the attacks were not random or economically motivated, as some have proposed, but anti-Christian in nature.
“They want to strike Christians,” Bishop Audu said, “and the government does nothing to stop them, because President Buhari is also of the Fulani ethnic group.”
Other observers have agreed that the attacks form part of a larger plan to eliminate Christians from the area.
“The killings are becoming no longer herder and farmer clashes” but a “deliberate attempt to conquer and occupy the land of the people’s ancestral heritage,” said Dr. Soja Bewarang, while denouncing an attack on a Bible school that trained Christian missionaries in Gana-Ropp village.
The Coordinator of the Federation of Middle Belt People, Mr. Manasseh Watyil, used more direct language still in describing the murders of Christians by Fulani herdsmen, saying “they are fighting a jihad” whose ultimate goal is to turn Nigeria into “an Islamic State.”
In his letter this weekend, Cardinal Okogie pinned responsibility for the ongoing killings on President Buhari, whose first duty as commander-in-chief is to protect his citizens.
“The latest killings in Plateau State make us wonder: where were you, Mr. President, while innocent lives were being wasted in Plateau State?” Okogie wrote. “Where were your service chiefs when babies were being ripped out of their mothers’ wombs by men who claim to do so because of their cows?”
“No one is above the law, not even you, Mr. President. That is why the Constitution provides for a process of removing the President,” he said.