Réligion of Thursday, 28 January 2016

Source: aa.com.tr

Divergent faiths cooperate to prevent terror attacks

Midjiyawa Bakary Midjiyawa Bakary

In Far North region, Christians protect mosques on Friday, Muslims patrol around churches on Sunday to prevent attacks from Boko Haram.

Increasingly frequent Boko Haram suicide attacks in Cameroon’s Far North region have impelled authorities and the population to diversify security methods with the aim to prevent attacks from the Nigerian militant group.

"We have a new technique; Christians secure mosques when Muslims pray… On Sundays when Christians are in places of worship, Muslims patrol around churches to detect any suspicious movement," Mindjiyawa Bakary, governor of Cameroon’s Far North region told Anadolu Agency on Thursday.

This new strategy is currently "being tested in some villages and will be extended to the whole region," Bakary said.

This is in addition to existing security methods, which include vigilance committees in villages near the Nigerian border that work hand in hand with Cameroonian security forces.

Armed with arrows and machetes, they perform daily patrols in villages and stop suspicious individuals. Members of the vigilance community have reportedly foiled several attacks.

A vigilance committee also was established in mosques in Yaounde, Cameroon’s capital city, a year ago.

Sheikh Ibrahim Moussa, Imam of the Yaounde Grand Mosque, told Anadolu Agency that the vigilance committee tried to identify suspicious activities around the mosque.

"If we have doubts, we denounce them to the police. Same for those who preach radical Islam," Moussa said.

In recent months, suicide attacks targeting places of worship in Cameroon’s Far North region have increased.

On Monday, at least, six people were killed in a Boko Haram suicide attack against a mosque in Cameroon’s Far North region, local administrative officials told Anadolu Agency.

Earlier, another suicide attack had targeted a mosque in Kouyape, in the Far North, killing 13 people.

Since the beginning of the year, Cameroon has suffered "15 suicide attacks perpetrated by Boko Haram militants," according to the country’s minister of communication, Issa Tchiroma Bakary.

Since 2013, over 1,098 civilians, 67 soldiers and three policemen have been killed in Boko Haram attacks in Cameroon’s Far North Region near the Nigerian border, according to Bakary.