• 30 injured, vehicles damaged
Hail
was let loose Wednesday evening, in Awka, the capital city of Anambra
State, as members of the Awka Catholic Diocese and natives of
Umudioka village, Awka, had a bloody clash over dust-to-dust burial
rites. In the clash...
over 30 persons were seriously injured while about
four vehicles were damaged.
Though some of the victims of the
bloody clash have been discharged from the hospital, about eight,
including a 70-year-old man, were still lying critically at the Regina
Caeli Hospital, Awka, as at press time yesterday.
The clash,
which was said to have taken place between 4.30pm and 7pm, caused
pandemonium in the area, as various dangerous weapons, including
machetes, were freely used, forcing residents of the area to run for
their dear lives.
While the Catholic Church claimed that her
members were attacked by the Umudioka youths, as they where coming
back from Mass at the family of the late Mr. Samuel Nwanna Nnebolise
in Umudioka, the villagers said they were attacked by thugs brought by
the Catholic Church over their insistence on their burial customs and
tradition.
It could be recalled that there has been a feud
between the Catholic Church and the Awka community over the
dust-to-dust burial rite, which escalated on May 23, 2013 during the
planed burial of the late Nnebolise, when the youth of Umudioka
allegedly disrupted the burial and desecrated holy things.
At
the hospital yesterday, some of the victims, who could speak, alleged
that they were ambushed by Umudioka youths, on their way home from the
Nnebolise family, after the prayers.
Nurses said they battled
all night to save the lives of the victims, especially, 19-year-old
Moses Ogah from St. John's Church Umuokpu, whose throat was almost
chopped off and 23-year-old Aduaka Jonah Ekene, from St. Martins
Church Abagan, who had severe machete cuts all around his body.
Narrating
his ordeal to Daily Sun on his hospital bed, 70-year-old, Sir Peter
C. Offodile, a knight of St. Molumba said: "Someone sent me a text
yesterday that the Bishop wanted to address us by 2pm.
I came
and they said that we should go and pray for the family of Nnebolise
and everybody should march to the place for the celebration of Mass.
All of us, including priests, indeed, about 50 of them, we went there
and celebrated Mass and sermon was said and communion served.
"After
the Mass, we all marched through Majoua Street on our way home. A
group of boys from Umudioka stopped us and started attacking us with
sticks and stones. They pushed me into the gutter.
One of the
boys broke my hand with a big stick and some used their machetes to
hit me. I managed to get out of the gutter almost naked, holding my
trousers; I even lost one pair of my shoe. It was at the end of the
road that we saw the police.
From there we were taken to the Cathedral and then to the hospital, Regina Caeli, where I am being treated."
Another
victim, Sir Obuekwe Obikwelu from Umuanaga village Awka, whose head
was bandaged because of the machete cuts he got said: "We went to
celebrate Mass at Umudioka at late Nnebolise's family and after
celebrating the mass, we were coming back when we were waylaid by some
bad boys.
As we were running I looked back and saw an old man
my fellow knight of St. Molumba being beating by the boys and I felt
if I left him, they may kill the old man. I went to them and said this
person you are beating is an old man and your brother; why beat him?
They
turned round and swooped on me, the first one gave me a machete cut
here, as I was holding the side, stones were rained on me and I was
rushed to this hospital." The Cathedral Administrator, St. Patrick
Cathedral Awka, Rev. Fr. Patrick Amaobi Chukwuma, who has been at the
centre of the matter, told Daily Sun at the hospital that they went to Nnebolise family to pray for them only to be attacked again by the Umudioka youths.
He
said: "Yesterday some priests from Awka Diocese, from Awka region and
Adazi region and some laity, including Catholic men, Catholic women
and some youths we went to identify with poor family of Nnebolise, who
have been suppressed by some people from Umudioka because they are
poor.
This thing has been happening since May 24, when their father, Samuel Nnebolise, died.
The
man before he died willed that he will be buried according to
Catholic rite but the villagers said no, he would be buried according to
traditional rite that is the controversy.
"But the family
invited us to bury their father, according Catholic rite, which they
refused and the corpse was returned to the mortuary and the family
went into prayers.
Last week, they wanted to stage a prayer and
after putting canopies and chairs for the prayers, the same youths
masked themselves, with about 20 masquerades; that was last Monday.
They
came into the family, armed and destroyed the canopies, took away the
seats, snatched handsets, destroyed the altar set and carried
everything away with some clothes.
"Yesterday, the church organised herself to celebrate Mass with the family. We went there with many priests and laity.
After
celebrating the Mass, we were about to go when stones started flying
from hidden places, from uncompleted houses, some houses. Stones were
being thrown by unknown people. Our youths have to defend the members
of the church.
They threw back the stones. We were going, not
knowing that the Umudioka youths were armed with machetes and they
started stabbing people. You have seen some of the victims.
They
were about 36, who sustained injuries from machete cuts and stones.
About 36 of them were affected. Some have been discharged. Those who
are critical are still in the hospital." Disagreeing with Rev. Fr.
Chukwuma's account, the Chairman, Okolobia Umudioka, Chief Ejike Nwude,
said the church members attacked the village.
He said: "It's
unfortunate, the mayhem was caused by the thugs. They waylaid us
yesterday, beat up our boys, destroyed our houses, even vehicles.
Yesterday morning we went to the Area Command with Father Chukwuma for
peace, and the Area Commander instructed everybody to be at peace and
not to go to Umudioka again.
"We accepted what the commander
said and left, everybody went home and that was why they took us
unaware because we were not expecting them.
We thought we've
reached a point of agreement. Unfortunately, around 4pm, I started
getting phone calls that the Catholic priest, with heavily armed
people, marched from St Patrick through Majua and when they got to
Majua Street, they started breaking glasses of Umudioka buildings,
throwing stone, singing war songs and making abusive insinuations.
"In
the process, one Igbogi Ejikeme, unaware that they were coming for
war, ran into them and they pounced on him. The young man is still in
the hospital as I am speaking with you.
While they were going,
they saw Chukeudeme's house and they destroyed it. "They started
throwing stones on anybody they met on the way. We ran away.
We
could not do anything because we were not expecting such magnitude of
thugs." On who injured the church people, Nwude said: "Because they
came from different places. They did not know themselves.
They
attacked themselves, because immediately you step out of the land and
tried to come back they take you as an enemy. They inflicted the
injuries on themselves because they came from different places.
They were hired. Some came from Nise, Mbaukwu and Nanka and so on."
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