Christianity News Daily

Three Christian Family Members Slain on Christmas Day

The bodies of Edrine Ngwabize and her two grandchildren, 5-year-old Emoni Niwalindwa and 13-year-old Mathias Byamukama were found inside their home in Nyabitutsi village, Kamwenge Sub-County, in Kamwenge District after Muslim extremists broke into their house on Dec. 25, the slain woman’s son said.

The bodies of Edrine Ngwabize and her two grandchildren, 5-year-old Emoni Niwalindwa and 13-year-old Mathias Byamukama were found inside their home in Nyabitutsi village, Kamwenge Sub-County, in Kamwenge District after Muslim extremists broke into their house on Dec. 25, the slain woman’s son said.

Byaruhanga said he saw the assailants first set ablaze the farm of a church pastor that is 500 meters from his mother’s home at about 7 p.m. He rushed to warn his mother and the two children, one of them his own, to take cover. Then he returned to hide his wife, who was ill, in a safe place.

One of the children belonged to his previously deceased sister, he said.

He rushed to a nearby police station, and officers promptly went to the site to begin an operation that continued throughout the night, he said.

“Early in the morning, when I visited my mother’s house, I found out that the Muslim terrorists had killed my mother and the two children and that the house had been damaged,” Byaruhanga said.

Police had shot dead the leader of the assailants, Musa Kamusi, as he was fleeing near the house, said local councilman area Yonasani Muhwezi. Another Islamic extremist leader, Abdul Rashid Kyoto, alias Njovu, had been arrested in November, he said.

The assailants were also said to have slaughtered five goats and taken some food items from the home of the deceased.

In the same district on Dec. 19, rebels from the Democratic Allied Forces (ADF) killed 10 Christians, sources said.

Uganda’s constitution and other laws provide for religious freedom, including the right to propagate one’s faith and convert from one religion to another. Muslims make up no more than 12 percent of Uganda’s population, with high concentrations in eastern areas of the country. 

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