The leader of Nigeria’s Christians called Tuesday on the United
States to declare the Islamist group Boko Haram to be terrorists, but a
US official said it was more important to address social inequalities.
In an unusually blunt appeal by a foreigner before the US Congress,
the head of the main Christian body in religiously divided Nigeria said
that a decision to blacklist three Boko Haram leaders as terrorists did
not go far enough.
Ayo Oritsejafor, president of the Christian Association of Nigeria,
said that the US move on June 21 was “the equivalent of designating
(Osama) bin Laden a terrorist but failing to designate Al-Qaeda a
terrorist organization.”
Oritsejafor said that the reluctance to brand Boko Haram as
terrorists had emboldened the group, which is estimated to have killed
more than 1,000 people since mid-2009 in attacks on Christian and
government sites.
“By refusing to designate Boko Haram as a foreign terrorist
organization, the United States is sending a very clear message, not
just to the federal government of Nigeria, but to the world that the
murder of innocent Christians and Muslims who reject Islamism — and I
make a clear distinction here between Islam and Islamism — are
acceptable losses,” Oritsejafor said.
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