Climate Change: The Latest Excuse for Slaughtering Christians
They ignorantly or mendaciously exploit the suffering of Christians and try to divert attention from Islamic radicalization, violence and terrorism.
Politicians have found a new straw man: climate change. There are certainly many things we can gradually do not to pollute or wreck our planet, but blaming it for the pervasive slaughter of Christians by Muslims in northern Africa is not one of them. It seems, sadly, that what drives the persecution of Christians there, and elsewhere, is doctrine, not climate change.
On June 5, 2022, Muslims massacred 50 Christians inside a Nigerian church on Pentecost Sunday (one of many examples of Nigerian Christians massacred while worshipping in their churches).
Two days later, Ireland's President Michael Higgins issued a statement linking the Nigerian church massacre to -- climate change. "The neglect of food security issues in Africa, for so long has brought us to a point of crisis that is now having internal and regional effects based on struggles, ways of life themselves," he wrote, implying that food shortages caused by the climate are what cause murder.
If you look at all four paragraphs of Higgins' statement on the Nigerian church attack, you will see that he (and those like him) have no explanation as to how climate change causes religious persecution. Apparently "food shortages" cause Muslims shouting "Allahu Akbar" ("Allah is the greatest") to bomb churches and murder Christians? It seems possibly a way to shift focus off what they might not want people thinking about -- Muslims killing Christians -- to what they might want them thinking about, climate change; and they possibly bank on the fact that most people do not read or think too critically, and may well go along with whatever sounds comfortable.
Nowhere does Higgins' statement acknowledge, much less condemn, Islamic radicalization and terrorism in the region. Both, however, are what led to the Pentecost Sunday church massacre.
Although unreported by the so-called "mainstream media," the Christians of Nigeria are, according to several NGOs (such as here and here) in fact being purged in a genocide. According to an August 2021 report, since the Islamic insurgency began in earnest in July 2009, more than 60,000 Christians have either been murdered during raids or abducted, never to be seen again. During this same timeframe, approximately 20,000 churches and Christian schools were torched and destroyed by extremist Muslims shouting "Allahu Akbar". In 2021, Muslims murdered at least 4,650 Nigerian Christians seemingly for their faith, and nearly 900 in just the first three months of this year.
Instead of remotely acknowledging any of these disturbing statistics, Ireland's president "condemned" those who "attempt to scapegoat [Muslim] pastoral peoples who are among the foremost victims of the consequences of climate change." This is a reference to the Fulani, Muslim herdsmen apparently motivated by jihadist ideology to raid and butcher Christians on what seems to be a daily basis. As this report indicates, in Nigeria, one Christian is killed every two hours -- most of them at the hands of Fulani.
On June 10, Bishop Jude Ayodeji Arogundade, of the Christian diocese where the Nigerian Christians were slaughtered, responded to Higgins' assertions that climate change is responsible -- as well as to the Irish president's obscene portrayal of the Fulani as victims no less than the Christians they slaughter:
Equally vocal in his condemnation of those who try to shift the focus of Islamic terrorism onto climate change was the human rights champion Lord David Alton of Liverpool. On June 12, he wrote:
Without naming any religion, Alton accurately but diplomatically concluded by writing:
Alton wrote on Twitter on June 6:
It is also revealing that when condemning a nearly identical terrorist attack to the Pentecost Sunday murder of 50 Nigerian Christians—namely, the 2019 Christchurch massacre, when an Australian man killed 51 Muslims in New Zealand—the president of Ireland said nothing about climate change. Rather, he highlighted the true cause for both attacks -- religion. After saying that the mosque attacks "appalled people all over the world," Higgins continued:
UN Secretary-General António Guterres, in December 2022, has also tried to divert attention from religiously-motivated terrorism toward climate change. "Climate change... is an aggravating factor for instability, conflict and terrorism," he said. If there were no hurricanes, there would be less terrorism?
These, then, are the lengths to which some people are willing to go. They either ignorantly or mendaciously exploit the human suffering of Christians and others by trying to deflect attention from the radicalization (such as here, here and here), violence (here, here , here and here) and terrorism (here, here and here) advocated by extremist Muslims and turning it toward their particular pet projects, in this instance, climate change.