Anambra
State governor, Willie Obiano, visited victims at the Nnamdi Azikiwe University
Teaching Hospital Nnewi
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Eleven worshippers
gunned-down in a Nigerian church funded by a man accused by some of being a
drug lord and described by others as a philanthropist may be victims of
"gang war".
Just
hours after the slaughter at the Sunday mass in St Philip's in the Ozubulu area
of southeastern Anambra state, detectives linked the killings to local
mafia-style syndicates that have influence well beyond Nigeria's shores.
"Information
revealed that this is not unconnected to a kind of a 'gang war' between the
children of the same village who are engaged in a warfare outside
Nigeria," said Anambra state police commissioner Garba Umar, referring to
South Africa.
Death
threats had reportedly been made against the apparent target Aloysius Nnamdi
Ikegwuonu, a wealthy young philanthropist who has been accused by some in the
Nigerian media of involvement in the criminal underworld.
Such
is Ikegwuonu's wealth that he had built roads and schools for the community and
even appeared on advertising posters proclaiming his "humanitarian projects".
But
on Sunday he was not in the church he had funded so lavishly, even donating
three cars to new preachers, according to a local resident.
"The
attackers went to the church where their target was supposed to be and started
shooting at the crowd," said Umar, who put the death toll at 11, while
witnesses say that as many as 20 parishioners could have been killed.
- 'Violence as a last
resort' -
The
gunman or gunmen -- the number of attackers is disputed -- then turned their
weapons on Ikegwuonu's father and the congregation in frustration at failing to
locate their target.
The
trigger for such apparently random bloodshed may have been pulled in South
Africa's sprawling commercial capital Johannesburg which is home to many
thousands of Nigerians.
Speaking
to the Nation newspaper, a spokesman for Ikegwuonwu denied commissioner Umar's
claim that "the mayhem was as a result of a drug war".
The
spokesman described allegations that Ikegwuonwu was involved in the drug trade
as "evil and malicious" to the Punch newspaper.
But
AFP has received testimony of a feud between him and a man called Obreche --
who is understood to be from the same state as Ikegwuonu, nicknamed Bishop.
According
to the account, Obreche treated Ikegwuonu like a son and helped him with his
commercial activities in Johannesburg.
But
the bishop is alleged to have feared competition from Obreche and his
affiliates, turning on the man and his organization in 2013.
Anambra
state governor Willie Obiano said in a statement on Monday he had been briefed
that "this dangerous conflict has been going on for a while in the country
where they both live" -- but did not name the men.
"We
are dealing with a dangerous gang war that has spilled over to Anambra
state," he said.
Valentina
Pancieri, a researcher in the criminology department at the University of Cape
Town, described such violence as "very, very rare".
"Nigerian
syndicates don't usually compete against each other and, unlike the Italian,
Russian or Mexican mafia, they use violence as a last resort because they don't
want attention to be drawn to them in foreign countries," she told AFP.
Nigerian
police said on Tuesday that they had made arrests in connection with the
incident without disclosing the identities of those held or how many people had
been detained.
"There
is a high possibility that innocent members of the public are being arrested...
while the real culprits possibly hide," said Emeka Umeagbalasi, an
activist with campaign group Intersociety which called for outside scrutiny of
the Anambra state police investigation.
In
2016, the church posted on Facebook that "no weapon formed or fashioned
against Chief Aloysius Nnamdi Ikegwuonu shall ever prosper in Jesus'
name".
For now, the 'Bishop'
remains in play.
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