Suspected al-Shabab militants have murdered a woman professing the Christian faith earlier this month after breaking and entering into her home in Mogadishu, Somalia.
Christian Convert Dragged From Home and Publicly
Executed in Somalia
Suspected al-Shabab militants have
murdered a woman professing the Christian faith earlier this month after
breaking and entering into her home in Mogadishu.
Sufia was at home with her parents
when a group of armed men burst into her home. Leaving her parents untouched,
the men grabbed Sufia, forcefully dragged her from the home at gunpoint, and
then publicly shot her, firing into the on-looking crowd as friends and
neighbors attempted to save her.
Immediately following the execution,
Sufia's killers fled the scene. Despite ongoing efforts by police to locate
them, Sufia's murderers remain at-large as of this release. The suspected work
of al-Shabab, an al-Qaida-linked terrorist network in Somalia, Sufia's death
could be the third al-Shabab murder this month.
On April 22, Mogadishu
Parliamentarian Abdiaziz Isaaq Mursal was the second Somali lawmaker killed by
al-Shabab militants in less than 48 hours for allowing the "invasion
of the Christians into Somalia," referencing lawmakers' vote to
accept financial support from Western governments and members of the African
Union who have sent troops into Somalia to oppose Islamist rebel groups.
Isak Mohamed Rino, a fellow
Parliamentarian, was the victim of an exploded bomb placed beneath his car on
the morning of April 21. In response to the attacks, al-Shabab's spokesperson,
Ali Dhere, was recorded on al-Shabab's Andulus radio in Barawe town
saying, "We are on war against the apostates in Mogadishu. We will
keep carrying attacks, targeting their lawmakers."
According to al-Shabab, all Somalis
are born Muslims by default. Somalis found practicing other religions are
considered guilty of apostasy. According to the fundamentalist brand of Islam
al-Shabaab adheres to, apostasy occurs when a Muslim leaves Islam for another
faith and should be put to death.
Several of the nation's leaders have
publicly condemned the attacks on the two murdered Somali Parliamentarians;
however, a public condemnation of the systematic execution of Somali Christians
has yet to be heard. Speaking on the deaths of the two
parliamentarians, president of Somalia, Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, said Sunday
the "culture of lawlessness that has plagued Somalia for the last 23 years
is coming to an end." Though similar calls to action have been made
in the past, al-Shabaab continues to enjoy complete freedom in its sustained
push to eradicate Somalia of its Christian population.
"Al-Shabab is an Islamic
extremist group that has vowed to make Somalia 'purely Islamic,' " says
International Christian Concern Regional Manager for Africa, William Stark.
"The group adheres to a fundamentalist interpretation of Islam that
includes the beheading of converts from Islam, or, as we've witnessed in
Sufia's case, execution by firing squad.
"The group continues to
terrorize not just Christians in Somalia, but any act, person, or policy that
could be construed as supportive of Christianity in Somalia. As more Somalis
return to Somalia following the establishment of the new government, steps must
be taken to protect Christians and other religious minorities. The practice of
kidnapping, torturing and publicly executing converts from Islam must be
addressed by the international community and should have no place in modern
society."
This article originally appeared on persecution.org.
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