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Blood on the Altar: The Price of Faith in Modern Nigeria -By Jeff Okoroafor

This op-ed dismantles the Nigerian government’s denial of a Christian genocide. With facts and figures, we expose the systematic attacks and call for an end to the impunity and killing.

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While it is politically convenient for Senator Ali Ndume and the Nigerian Senate to dismiss the grave concerns raised by U.S. Senator Ted Cruz as “false” and “divisive,” this denial is a profound betrayal of the thousands of Nigerian Christians who have been systematically targeted, butchered, and displaced by Islamist terrorist groups. To claim that the violence is blind to religion is to ignore a decade of empirical data, survivor testimonies, and the stated ideological goals of the perpetrators themselves. The Nigerian government’s refusal to acknowledge this stark reality is not a strategy for national unity; it is a recipe for continued impunity and a green light for genocide.

The ideological core of the violence is unmistakable. To argue that groups like Boko Haram and the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) are not primarily targeting Christians is to willfully ignore their foundational doctrine. Boko Haram’s very name translates to “Western education is forbidden,” and its mission, since its inception, has been to establish an Islamic caliphate governed by a strict interpretation of Sharia law. Their violence is explicitly sectarian. They have repeatedly declared Christians and any Muslims who oppose their ideology as legitimate targets. This is not theoretical. The 2014 abduction of the Chibok schoolgirls was targeted specifically because it was a Christian school. The group’s leader, Abubakar Shekau, in a video message, explicitly referred to the girls as “slaves” and threatened to sell them, stating they should not have been in school in the first place, but rather should be married. This act was a direct manifestation of their war on “Western” and Christian influence.

The empirical evidence of systematic targeting is overwhelming and cannot be dismissed by political rhetoric. The Global Terrorism Index consistently ranks Boko Haram as one of the deadliest terrorist groups in the world. Its attacks on churches, Christian communities, and symbols of Christianity are not coincidental but strategic, aimed at eradicating a religious presence and inciting sectarian war. A 2020 Report by the International Society for Civil Liberties and Rule of Law (Intersociety) found that between June 2015 and March 2020, at least 34,000 Christians had been killed by Boko Haram and Fulani militants. The report detailed the destruction of hundreds of churches and the forced displacement of millions from their ancestral lands. The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) has for years recommended that Nigeria be designated as a “Country of Particular Concern” (CPC) due to systematic, ongoing, and egregious violations of religious freedom. In 2020, the Trump administration finally made this designation, a move that the Joe Biden administration regrettably reversed, despite no significant improvement in the conditions on the ground.

The violence perpetrated by armed Fulani militias is often disingenuously framed as simple “farmer-herder clashes.” However, organizations like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have documented how these attacks frequently target Christian farming communities in the Middle Belt. The pattern is clear: villages are scouted, attacked at night with sophisticated weaponry, and residents are massacred, their homes and churches burned. The 2022 attack on St. Francis Catholic Church in Owo, Ondo State, which killed over 40 worshippers, is a brutal testament to this trend. These are not clashes over resources; they are pogroms designed for territorial conquest and religious cleansing.

The most damning aspect of this crisis is the consistent failure of the Nigerian state to protect its Christian citizens and to hold the perpetrators accountable. This failure manifests in several ways. There are numerous documented cases where security forces were warned of an impending attack and failed to respond. In other instances, communities have reported that Fulani militants move with their cattle and sophisticated weapons, passing through military checkpoints unmolested, suggesting a level of complicity or official protection. Furthermore, political downplaying has become official policy. Statements like Senator Ndume’s are not isolated. For years, the federal government has consistently downplayed the religious dimension of the killings. By framing it solely as “clashes” or “general insecurity,” they absolve themselves of the responsibility to address the core ideological driver of the violence. This is compounded by a near-total lack of prosecutions. Arrests and successful prosecutions for these mass murders are vanishingly rare. This creates a culture of absolute impunity, where killers know they can slaughter with no fear of legal consequence. The message this sends is that Christian lives are cheap.

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu now stands at a crossroads. He can continue the denialist and ineffective policies of his predecessor, or he can seize this moment to demonstrate genuine leadership and restore security for all Nigerians, regardless of their faith. I therefore call on President Tinubu to publicly acknowledge the reality and stop the politically correct obfuscation. He must publicly and unequivocally state that Christians in Nigeria are being systematically targeted by Islamist terrorist groups, for truth is the first step toward justice. He must order a security overhaul, directing the security agencies to develop and implement a robust, intelligence-driven plan to protect vulnerable Christian communities in the Middle Belt and Northern Nigeria. This includes establishing permanent security outposts in high-risk areas and responding decisively to distress calls. He should declare a state of emergency on kidnapping, treating the rampant kidnapping for ransom, which often targets Christians traveling on major roads, as a national emergency, deploying special forces and technology to secure these highways. It is imperative that he ensures justice and prosecutions by establishing a special judicial panel to investigate the most egregious massacres of recent years. He must ensure that perpetrators, regardless of their influence or ethnicity, are arrested, prosecuted, and punished to the full extent of the law to shatter the culture of impunity. Finally, he must engage in honest dialogue with Christian leaders and affected communities to understand their security needs and rebuild trust, for empty promises and political theater are no longer acceptable.

The blood of thousands of Nigerian Christians cries out from the ground. Their deaths are not a “misconception” to be corrected by diplomatic memos; they are a national stain that can only be cleansed by truth, justice, and decisive action. President Tinubu must choose: will he be remembered as the leader who presided over the continued slaughter of his citizens, or the one who finally had the courage to end it? The world is watching, and history will be the judge.

Jeff Okoroafor is a social accountability advocate and a political commentator focused on governance, accountability, and social justice in West Africa.

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