Tag: Christian genocide

  • Alleged Christian genocide: U.S. statements emboldened violent groups in Nigeria, Fed Govt warns

    Alleged Christian genocide: U.S. statements emboldened violent groups in Nigeria, Fed Govt warns

    …says no evidence of ‘Christian genocide’, urges stronger Nigeria–U.S. collaboration

    The federal government has cautioned that recent pronouncements from the United States on Nigeria’s security situation have inadvertently emboldened opportunistic violent groups, encouraging them to exploit international narratives and stage renewed attacks on soft targets.

    The warning was issued on Wednesday by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Senator George Akume, during a press conference in Abuja, addressing the evolution of violent extremism, Boko Haram and ISWAP insurgency, North-West banditry, economic drivers of insecurity, and what he described as the need to clarify misleading claims of “Christian genocide” in Nigeria.

    Akume said insurgency structures had been significantly degraded before the latest wave of commentary from Washington, adding that such statements, though perhaps well-intentioned, had the unintended effect of emboldening extremist factions. 

    He stressed that what Nigeria needed from global partners, especially the United States, was collaboration through intelligence, technology and equipment, not public labels that distort the country’s security realities.

    The SGF firmly dismissed as inaccurate and dangerous the growing international rhetoric that Nigeria is witnessing a “Christian genocide.” 

    He said no credible international organisation had ever classified the crisis as genocide against any group.

    According to him, Boko Haram and ISWAP have historically attacked both churches and mosques, killing Christians, Muslims and traditionalists alike, while North-West bandits operate primarily as criminal enterprises with economic motivations rather than religious ones.

    “The current misrepresentation of the crisis as ‘genocide against Christians’ fuels religious tension, emboldens extremist and criminal factions seeking to exploit sectarian narratives, creates diplomatic friction, and undermines Nigeria’s longstanding efforts to build constructive international security partnerships,” he warned.

    Akume reiterated that Nigeria is a secular state whose constitution prohibits the adoption of any religion as a national faith, adding that President Bola Tinubu’s appointments reflect the nation’s diversity, with equal representation of Christians and Muslims in the Federal Executive Council and the National Security Council.

    The SGF also said President Tinubu is now doing what ought to have been done over the last twenty years by previous administrations for the good of all Nigerians.

    Providing a detailed historical context, Akume traced the insurgency to the ideological currents that shaped Boko Haram from 2002, through its radicalisation under Mohammed Yusuf, the mass-casualty era of Abubakar Shekau, and its transformation into ISWAP following its pledge of allegiance to ISIS in 2015.

    He also highlighted the role of the 2011 collapse of Libya and instability in Egypt, which opened trafficking corridors for extremist groups. 

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    Weapons flowed through Al-Qaeda-linked AQIM routes into the Sahel and Nigeria, boosting the operational capacities of Boko Haram, ISWAP and later, armed banditry networks.

    On banditry in the North-West, the SGF said all credible analyses point to economic roots, including competition for land and water resources, cattle rustling, illegal mining of gold and other minerals, kidnapping-for-ransom, and extortion of rural communities.

    “These pressures, not religious motives, explain the persistence of violence in the North-West,” he said.

    Akume referenced the June 13–14 Yelewata attack in Guma Local Government Area of Benue State, where over 100 people were killed, according to independent rights organisations. 

    He said President Tinubu immediately dispatched relief materials and ordered a census of destroyed homes and properties to facilitate reconstruction.

    Akume stressed that the Nigerian Armed Forces remain highly capable and have reclaimed vast territories once occupied by Boko Haram and ISWAP. 

    He said Nigeria does not require foreign combat troops but needs targeted intelligence, surveillance technology and advanced equipment to finish the job.

    “What is needed is partnership, not prescriptive statements,” he added.

    Outlining the government’s strategy, Akume said Nigeria will scale up nationwide operations, tighten intelligence-sharing with global allies, intensify efforts to dismantle illegal mining and trafficking networks, and strengthen rural security and border governance.

    He appealed to citizens across political, ethnic and religious lines to unite against violent extremism, saying “now is the time to speak with one strong and united voice to confront a common enemy and eradicate terrorists, bandits and insurgents from our national borders.”

    Akume reaffirmed Nigeria’s commitment to deepening diplomatic ties with the United States on the basis of mutual respect, shared democratic values and a joint responsibility to enhance regional and global stability.

  • Still on the Christian genocide matter

    Still on the Christian genocide matter

    By Mike Kebonkwu

     It is an indisputable fact that there is widespread abductions, kidnappings and killing across country.  It is also incontrovertible that these killings are caused by syndicated criminal cartels; insurgents, bandits, kidnappers, armed herdsmen, “unknown gunmen”, ethnic and tribal agitators. The casualties from the activities of the criminal underworld are Nigerians; Christians and Muslims alike, without discrimination.  

    We may choose to play the ostrich, but the reality is that our land is crimson with blood, and citizens irrespective of status live in real fear.  Incidentally in some instances, a distinct dominant group, population and communities appear clearly targeted, as in the case of Christian minorities in the North.  This defined pattern is also noticeable in the Middle Belt region of Plateau and Benue, and Kaduna State in the North Central.  This is common knowledge and verifiable although there is no accurate statistics on percentage of death in Christians/Muslims population.  We have also had religion instigated crises from time to time which are mostly driven by the elites for political gains.

    The government appears not to be doing just enough in the fight against insecurity.  There is mass poverty and unemployment but that is certainly not the cause of the pervasive insecurity in the land. The security agencies and the police on their part are also caught flat-footed and unable to rein in the criminals not because of lack of capacity, but due also to ethno-religious politics. The security agents are not even spared in these attacks and killings as victims. 

    Convoys of troops on patrol have been attacked and sometimes these criminals carry out audacious attacks right in their bases.  Police officers are also deliberately targeted and their weapons carted away.  When the security agencies go after these criminals and there are collateral damages, some rights groups scream fundamental rights of the criminals and ignore the safety and security of the state and citizens.

    We do not need outsiders to educate us on the pattern of the pervasive insecurity and the casualties throughout the length and breadth of the country. The intelligence communities and security agents know the criminals, sponsors and their harbours. There appears also to be some elements in both government and security who oil the wheel of the criminal cartels providing them covers. This is the reason the government tilt towards pacification and appeasement policy in dealing with the behemoth. Why a fighting force and trained military commanders would endorse negotiation, and provide training and rehabilitation for insurgents and bandits that have killed innocent citizens, troops, and sacked communities beats one’s imagination.  This certainly cannot find answer in strategic military thinking whether we choose to parrot non-kinetic approach to fighting internal security challenges.   

    A military commander should be able to draw a fine line of demarcation between political expediency and military professionalism when engaging with enemies of the state. Providing sanctuary for criminals weakens the fight against insecurity and induces low morale on troops.

    Nigeria is a highly divided country along ethnic and religious dichotomy.  We also operate very fragile constitution that does not favour a good secular state.  This is the reason Nigerians are not going to agree on the way of dealing with insecurity.  We may not have accurate statistics of death and casualties along Christian and Muslim divide.  What is true is that Nigerians are the victims of the insurgency, banditry and sundry other criminalities from South to North.  If there is a concentration of attack on a particular ethnic nationality or religious group or sect, it no doubt qualifies as genocide or pogrom; but one does not believe it is official government policy. 

    The aggregate of views do not seem to see official government endorsement to label the killing in Nigeria as genocide against Christians; it will remain a controversial issue.  Again, such conclusion is difficult without verifiable evidence.  After all, the Nigerian bureaucracy is driven by both Christians and Muslims elites.  Yes, it is true that known and confirmed bigots and supremacists have held strategic appointments in government and may still be there.  The killing in Nigeria is not an endorsed government policy to properly label it genocide in the classical pattern. The government may have been lethargic and complacent, but not manifestly complicit. 

    There are moles and quislings in government, security forces and intelligence community who are rogue elements operating for pecuniary reasons.  You cannot saddle someone with the task of solving a problem that he is fingered to be complicit and expect to get result.  We should stop throwing money at problems; we should confront and deal with insecurity and not seen to pacify criminals; nobody can pacify the grave.  What is troubling is the inability of the security forces to find its rhythm and give these criminals bloody nose.  Soldiers have been captured, tortured and slaughtered in their numbers in different theatres in the North and South East and shared in social media.  Their bodies are never recovered and there are no consequences.  Former Chief of Defence Staff, Air Marshall Alex Badeh was murdered by criminals and the killers are not unmasked and brought to book, not even by the military intelligence with all their resources; and someone is telling us that security has improved?  “If gold rust, what will the iron do”; is a saying in my Ika dialect.  If soldiers are killed and probably mutilated without consequences, what will be the fate of the ordinary defenceless citizens!

    Communities that offer sanctuary to criminals, kidnappers, bandits and insurgents are also complicit.  Community leaders have been discovered to be involved in the unwholesome criminal activities fuelling insecurity.  Our weak legal system is made weaker when criminals that are convicted are offered pardon and amnesty.  The battle against insecurity is our fight; it is not going to be won by the United States or any other country for that matter. 

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    Now, Nigerians are jittery and divided because the President of the United States of America,  Donald J. Trump has threatened to designate Nigeria as a Country of Particular Concern (CPC) on account of perceived persecution and genocide against Christians.  If you cannot secure your borders and protect your citizens and someone offers to do it with or without your permission, I think you should swallow your pride and allow it, assuming indeed, the threat is real and practicable. If a man sees a venomous snake and ducks, while a woman kills it, it is ok; the snake has been killed!   

    Some of our elites and scholars want Nigeria to turn to China, Iran and Russia for strategic alliance and reduce the influence and reliance on America.  These are countries with destabilizing influences across the globe, with Iran exporting and promoting variant of religious extremism and terrorism. You want to embrace a leper because you are confronted by a masquerade! 

    One reads that Russia and China are watching or monitoring development following President Trump’s threat; one would ask, for what, and to what end?  Russia and America have their problems.  We are turning our country to a pawn on the chessboard of international hawks.  Any such idea of is a product of  siege  mentality of an oppressed mind that is yet to be liberated; what Fela Anikulapo Kuti of blessed memory would call, “colo-mentality.  The military commanders should own up to the fight against insecurity; it is a professional and constitutional duty. I maintain that we still have a strong military that can bite; let us wake it up. 

    Nigerians should save their breath; the United States of America will not invade Nigeria as they do not stand on any solid ground in fact, law and morality.  Nigerians are dying in their numbers and we should stop the haemorrhage; let us protect Christians, Muslims and secure our country.  No foreign partner can do it for us because our interests do not coincide with theirs.

    •Kebonkwu Esq is an Abuja-based attorney. He writes via mikekebonkwu@yahoo.com

  • Christian genocide claim: FG spent N1.15tn to procure arms from US to fight terrorism – institute

    Christian genocide claim: FG spent N1.15tn to procure arms from US to fight terrorism – institute

    President Bola Tinubu’s administration has committed $801 million (over N1.15 trillion) to arms deals with the United States alone between 2024 and 2025 as part of its military modernisation programme, the Independent Media and Policy Initiative (IMPI) has said.

    The organisation said that there has also been a clear demonstration of political will by the federal government to combat terrorism and safeguard the lives of Nigerians, as well as to guarantee unrestricted religious freedom and practices in the country. 

    ‎‎In a policy statement signed by its Chairman, Omoniyi Akinsiju, the organisation noted that this is contrary to the impression created in the US President Donald Trump’s decision to redesignate Nigeria as a Country of Particular Concern (CPC).

    According to the statement, in 2024, Nigeria recorded its highest single-year expenditure on arms import in recent times, with over N520 billion spent, representing a record-breaking surge in military asset acquisition for the country.

    It added that the US President may be holding out for more arms transactions between the two countries after claiming that the country is not doing enough to protect Christians from extremist attacks. 

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    ‎”Our consideration is that with a threat to storm Nigeria with ‘gun-a-blazing,’ the US President may be out to compel the Nigerian government to engage more with American arms manufacturers.

    “This is especially so with the place of China, US perennial competitor in all spheres of engagements, in Nigeria’s arms supplies eco-system,” the statement partly read.

    It said, ‎”This figure accounts for approximately 67% of the total arms import bill over the five-year period from 2020 to 2024, according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS). A substantial portion of this amount, ₦483.85 billion, was spent in the final quarter of the year.

    ‎”The military assets procurement includes the acquisition of 12 AH-1Z Viper attack helicopters, regarded as the world’s deadliest attack helicopter, a $455 million deal aimed at strengthening counterinsurgency capabilities,” the statement said.

    It noted that the contract was awarded to Bell Textron, an American aerospace company, in March 2024.

    The statement added, ‎”These helicopters are part of broader investments in military equipment and technology, intended to aid in tackling terrorism, piracy, and other forms of violent crimes across the nation, enhancing Nigeria’s ability to collaborate with international partners on security initiatives.

    ‎”In addition, Nigeria completed a historic $346 million arms deal with the United States in August 2025, marking another impressive large single purchase of military hardware with the objective of strengthening the military precision capabilities. 

    ‎”The contract involves more than 1,000 MK-82 500-pound bombs, over 5,000 Advanced Precision Kill Weapon System (APKWS) rounds, programmable fuzes, airfoil groups, and extensive logistical and technical assistance.

    ‎”The acquisition will complement the existing counterinsurgency operations that Nigeria has been waging against Boko Haram, the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) and bandits, which are still operational in some northern states.

    ‎”This, for us, underlines the administration’s commitment to boosting the operational readiness of security agencies in the war against terrorism and insurgency in the country.”

    The statement added, ‎”In 2024, China supplied up to $152 million worth of VT-4 main battle tanks, ST1 light tanks, and SH-5 self-propelled howitzers.

    ‎ “This position is further reinforced by the American government’s call to its military hardware and software manufacturing sector to explore opportunities available in Nigeria for the supply of sophisticated tools and systems, such as surveillance technology, unscrewed aerial vehicles, and advanced detection equipment.

    ‎”This apparent business pitch coming from the US International Trade Commission holds much weight for an increased market share manoeuvre than a declaration of war on Nigeria by the US.”

  • NCSCN urges Tinubu to appoint Ambassadors, dismisses claims of Christian genocide

    NCSCN urges Tinubu to appoint Ambassadors, dismisses claims of Christian genocide

    The National Civil Society Council of Nigeria (NCSCN) has called on President Bola Tinubu to urgently appoint Ambassadors to key countries and establish a national framework for international lobbying, saying that the prolonged delay in such appointments was weakening Nigeria’s diplomatic and foreign relations.

    The Council made the call in a communiqué after an emergency national meeting in Abuja.

    The meeting, which drew more than 310 associations from across the country, had equal representation of Christian, Muslim and traditional religious leaders.

    According to the document signed by the Chairman, Communiqué Drafting Committee, Mazi Oscar Kalu, and others, the meeting was convened to address growing international tension and media reports alleging a “Christian genocide” in Nigeria, as well as increasing criticism of the Federal Government’s failure to appoint ambassadors almost two years after recalling the previous envoys.

    The Council observed that there is no authentic and accessible national database containing verified statistics on victims of terrorists and bandits attacks, categorised by gender, age and religion. 

    This, it said, has resulted in unverifiable claims and widespread speculation, which have fuelled misleading narratives within and outside the country.

    The Council described as erroneous the impression being circulated in international circles that terrorists and bandits are targeting Christians and Christian communities, noting that available evidence shows that Muslims and Islamic communities are equally, and in some cases more, affected by such attacks.

    The NCSCN accused some political actors of deliberately politicising insecurity to overheat the polity and gain undue advantage.

    The communiqué expressed concerns over Nigeria’s diplomatic vacuum, lamenting that nearly two years into President Tinubu’s administration, the country has no appointed ambassadors to even strategic nations such as the United States of America.

    It stated that this situation has resulted in poor diplomatic relations, weakened foreign policy management, and left Nigeria vulnerable to manipulations by world powers.

    The group warned that the absence of ambassadors has hindered communication and lobbying efforts between Nigeria and other countries, particularly the United States, thereby worsening current diplomatic tensions. 

    It cited the recent international outcry over alleged religious persecution and threats of sanctions as examples of challenges that could have been better managed through active diplomatic engagement.

    The Council also lamented the absence of a deliberate framework for international lobbying since the administration of former President Olusegun Obasanjo, noting that effective lobbying is essential in promoting Nigeria’s interests and image among nations and multinational organisations.

    It emphasised that ambassadors play a vital role in representing Nigeria’s interests abroad, promoting trade and investment, and fostering mutual understanding between nations. 

    The absence of such representatives, it said, has left a significant gap in Nigeria’s global influence, hampered its ability to attract investment, and left citizens abroad more vulnerable in times of crisis.

    The Council recommended that the Federal Government, through the Office of the National Security Adviser, immediately commence the documentation and harmonisation of verified data on terrorist and bandit attacks to aid accurate reporting and reduce misinformation. It also urged the government to convene an inter-religious dialogue to address the issue of alleged Christian genocide and calm rising tensions.

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    The Council demanded that President Tinubu submit a list of Ambassadorial nominees to the Senate for confirmation before the end of November 2025, stressing that the continued delay was unjustifiable and detrimental. 

    It also called for the development of a national framework for strategic international lobbying, to be handled by competent diplomats and experienced professionals.

    “The Foreign Relations and Policies of a country are crucial to its national development. Therefore, the Nigerian Government must not take the current situation of accusation of Christian genocide for granted. The assertions from the international community, especially America, must be handled professionally, with the highest level of diplomacy and caution, by confronting the matter with verifiable facts and figures.

    “In addition, running a nation for over two years without ambassadors to nations is both unthinkable and highly detrimental to any government. President Bola Ahmed Tinubu must know that no reason is good enough or can well justify the inability of his administration to appoint ambassadors after two years in government,” the communiqué reads.

  • Christian Genocide And The Dangers Of Mischaracterisation

    Christian Genocide And The Dangers Of Mischaracterisation

    Here is no-one in Nigeria that has spoken up for the rights of Christians, spoken out against Christian marginalisation and persecution and warned about the reality and dangers of Islamic fundamentalism and Islamist terror more than yours truly over the last 30 years.

    Whether it be the sharia debates, the debate on the secularity of the Nigerian state, the debate on the plight of Christians in Northern Nigeria or the debate on ethnic and religious hegemony and domination, I have been deeply involved and invested in these matters right from the beginning.

    In each of these prolonged and often acrimonious and volatile debates I have played a leading role and held my corner. For those that doubt this the records are clear and I suggest that they go back and read all I have written and said about these vexing issues over the last three decades.

    I have also made it perfectly clear over the years that it would be an honour for me to sacrifice all, including my life, in defence of my faith and that will never change. That was my position then and that is my position today.

    My knowledge about the  experiences of Christians in Nigeria is extensive and my insight and understanding of the history of our country is next to none.

    This places me in a unique position and gives me the ability to speak with authority about the ongoing debate on whether or not what we are witnessing in Nigeria today is indeed “Christian genocide”.

    In the last three weeks I have written two widely published essays on this matter.

    The first is titled ‘The Fiction Of Christian Genocide and the Conspiracy Against Nigeria’ and the second is titled ‘A Warning To Senator Ted Cruz’.

    For those that have not read them already I recommend them both in order to get a clearer and deeper perspective on the matter.

    This contribution is my third to this increasingly contentious and volatile debate and I sincerely hope that it brings more insight and understanding to the issues under consideration.

    Permit me to get to the meat of the matter.

    There is no doubt that Christians are being targetted and slaughtered in massive numbers in Nigeria.

    No-one can deny that. It is a reality that we as Christians have lived with for many years.

    What needs to be understood however is that in the last 15 years as many Muslims have been targetted and slaughtered by the same group of heartless terrorists as well.

    To mischaracterise what is going on in our nation as “Christian genocide” is a knee jerk and emotional reaction to a very complex and profound problem.

    It is an eloquent testimony to the sordid and divisive disinformation, misinformation and falsehood that those that insist on describing it in such terms have resorted to.

    It is a gross, perfidious and unforgivable mischaracterisation of the facts on the ground, a Goebellian misrepresentation of reality and a perverse inversion of the truth.

    It is also a specious, simplistic, shallow and flawed perspective which is deeply rooted in ignorance, mischief, malevolence, malice, deceit and intellectual dishonesty, which does not in any way define the very real problems or provide a lasting solution to the monuemental challenges that Nigerian Christians are facing and which is designed to divide us and pave the way for a well-orchestrated and carefully scripted attempt to destabilise our nation, thrust us into a volatile season and cycle of mutual suspicion, sectarian violence and calmuny and set us up for an unconstitutional regime change before or by 2027.

    To insist on perpetuating and propagating this mischaracterisation and falsehood is an extreemly dangerous path to tread which, if care is not taken, will ultimately make matters far worse. 

    For example the frantic public call by Mr. Eric Prince (the notorious founder of the discredited American private security company of murderous and savage western mercenaries that wreaked havoc in Iraq after the American invasion known as Blackwater) to the Vatican, the Pope, prominent Christian leaders from all over the world and President Donald Trump to “fund and support” a private Christian army which he will gladly put together and lead to come to Nigeria to “protect the Christian community and kill Muslims” is not only irresponsible and unhelpful but is also fraught with many dangers.

    Again the call by U.S. Congressman Chris Smith to Trump to “arm Christians in Nigeria with American weapons” and to use the American Airforce to “bomb Muslim communities in our country” will lead to a further escalation of violence and open armed conflict between hitherto law- abiding Christians and Muslims who are not only fully integrated but who have also lived peacefully together in harmony over the years. Sending arms to aide one community and U.S. war planes to bomb the other cannot possibly augur well for us.

    To send arms to the Nigerian Government to assist in our fight against the terrorists is one thing and would of course be a welcome and laudable initiative and development but to send arms and private mercenary armies from the West to fight for Christians in our country and kill our Muslim brothers or for Christian communites to receive arms directly from the Americans whilst the Muslims are bombed out of existence by western jets is madness and an open invitation to chaos and fratricidal butchery in Nigeria.

    It would indeed mark the end of our country as we know it and the beginning of a civil war which will last for the next 50 years and which will have cataclysmic consequences for the Nigerian people, the west African sub region, the African continent and indeed much of the world.

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    Such insane and provocative rhetoric from the likes of Prince and Moore must cease forthwith. They do not love our country more than we do and we must not allow them to light a fire or ignite a bomb that will consume us all.

    Outside of this the mischaracteristion of our situation  has an additional three obvious and immediate consequences. 

    Firstly it negates the idea that Muslims are being targetted by the same terrorists that are killing Christians.

    Secondly it belittles and underplays the massive loss of Muslims lives and suggests that those lives count for nothing.

    Finally it runs the risk of further dividing our people on religious lines by casting all Muslims as the perpetrators and only Christians as the victims.

    This cannot augur well for the unity of our country and for our collective fight against terror.

    The American and western leaders that are propagating and spouting it, with the help of the CIA and their local assets, obviously have an insidious hidden agenda and a sinister ulterior motive for doing so.

    You do not have to be a bright bulb or a Professor of world history to appreciate that.

    All you need to do is to have a little common sense, a good memory, an understanding of the times we are  living in and observe what the Americans and their western allies have been doing in the Middle East, North Africa and indeed much of the world ever since 9/11.

    The sad reality of Nigeria is not “Christian genocide” but the genocide of BOTH Christians and Muslims by the hands of a handful of savage and barbaric terrorist militias that falsely claim to be Muslims but that do not in actual fact represent any faith.

    They represent only satan, their insatiable bloodlust and their sadistic, depraved, delusional, psychotic and psycopathic disposition.

    Some of them, like Boko Haram, ISWAP, Al Qaeda and Ansaru operate mainly in the North, murdering and displacing both Christians and Muslims with impunity and no remorse whilst others, like ESN, who claim to be championing the cause of Christians and Jews, operate mainly in the South East again murdering and displacing both Christians and Muslims.

    They, like the Haramites and their genocidal partners in crime, do not represent any faith other than that of the devil who has sent them.

    Our duty as Christians is to foster national, religious and ethnic unity by closing ranks with our Muslim brothers and fighting our common enemy which these terrorist groups represent.

    Anything less than that will only divide us further and take us down the brutal and bloody road to Kigali and, God forbid, a Rwandan-style and horrific showdown and a genocidal storm of cataclysmic carnage.

    Our security agencies have worked extreemly hard over the last two years in containing the scourge of terror that has afflicted us.

    This is proved by the fact that a record number of terrorists have been killed and many of their most dangerous and wanted commanders and leaders have been captured and detained.

    We must commend and encourage them in their endeavours. However much more needs to be done.

    We are a nation at war and the Federal Government must do far more by breaking the ranks of the terrorists with an iron fist, ripping out their hearts, killing them in even larger numbers than they are already doing and by effectively, courageously and vigorously countering the American and Zionist-sponsored “Christian genocide in Nigeria” propaganda and disinformation campaign that is spreading like wild-fire throughout the world.

    This can best be done not just by continuously issuing press statements and conducting television interviews in our local media but by engaging the services of seasoned and experienced American lobbyists in Washington DC itself and more importantly by giving our very able Foreign Minister, Ambassador Yusuf Tuggar, the full support that he needs and allow him to take up and lead the initiative fully without hinderance.

    He is an exceptionally brilliant and incisive diplomat who is highly experienced, who knows the history of world politics inside out, who was educated in the west from an early age and therefore cannot be intimidated by them, who is a skilled negotiator, who is a diehard patriot that will never betray our national interest and cause and who has nerves of steel.

    I know this because I have known him for well over 40 years!

    Outside of that our Government must refuse to allow themselves to be hoodwinked by the words of middle-ranking American Governnent officials who are not members of the MAGA inner circle and who do not truly represent the very hardline and extreeme views of the right-wing Christian fundamentalist and anti-Muslim forces that Trump holds dear.

    If they really want to know what Trump is thinking but has so far refused to voice about Nigeria it would be wise for our Government to consider the words of Senator Marco Rubio, Senator Ted Cruz,  Congressman Riley Moore and Congressman Chris Smith far more than the soothing and encouraging words and expressions of support from “friendly faces” in the Trump administration who have deep ties with and a soft spot for Nigeria but who are not at the heart of the MAGA power configuration like Trump’s Lebanese brother in-law and Special Advisor on African Affairs, Massad Boulos.

    American doublespeak and subterfuge is an art and we must never take them for their word or drink from their poisoned chalice.

    As the Bible says “their speech is as smooth as butter but war is in their heart”.

    A word is enough for the wise.

    In an additional step to protect ourselves and secure our future we must also build stronger ties with China and Russia and enter into a defence pact with either one or both.

    We should also become a full-fledged member of BRICS and join the rest of the Global South in attempting to regain our self-respect and dignity.

    This would be a step in the right direction which will enable us to have a fighting chance to resist the very real threat that America and her Western allies have presented to us.

    The die is cast and, as Shakespeare observed in his play titled Julius Caesar, ‘Caesar has crossed to Rubicorn’.

    We need the manifestation of strength and courage as we face these complex and formidable challenges to our essence and being and not weakness and cowardice.

    Rather than always going on our knees, constantly grovelling, playing the fool and attempting to secure their validation regardless of the gratuitous insults and indignities that they have regularly subjected us to it is time for us to recognise the fact that they have never wished us well and that they have NO intention of allowing us to fulfill our full potentials or achieve our manifest and God-given destiny.

    This is the bitter truth that few care to admit.

    Permit me to end this contribution with the following questions.

    How would the Christians of Nigeria react if the leaders of Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, Turkey, Egypt, Indonesia, the UAE and the OIC described what is going on in Nigeria as “Muslim genocide” and not only downplay but ignore with contempt the fact that Christians are being killed in equal, if not more, numbers?

    Would such a mischaracterisation not be regarded as being rooted in ignorance and mischief and would it not be rightly deemed as being inaccurate and unacceptable?

    If the answer is ‘yes’ then it would be equally inappropriate to refer to the terrible and collective plight that we, as Christians and Muslims, are jointly facing as “Christian genocide”.

    What is good for the goose is surely good for the gander.

    We are all victims of the terrorists, both Christian and Muslim, and we must all join our hands and collectively resist them.

    That is the way forward.

    Anything less will lead to catastrophy for us all and will represent a massive victory for the terrorists and the foreign hegemons that sent them and that seek to divide and destroy us.

    On a final note I challenge my readers to consider the following.

    When we collectively opposed the genocide in and total destruction and decimation of Gaza over the last two years no-one in the world  referred to what was going on there as “Muslim genocide”.

    This is because thousands of innocent and defenceless Palestinian Christians were also subjected to genocide, mass murder, ethnic cleansing, displacement and crimes against humanity and had their Churches, homes, farms and hospitals bombed into rubble and burnt to the ground by the Zionist terrorists of the Israeli Defence Force.

    In the same vein when we oppose the barbarism and genocide that we are witnessing in Nigeria we must not refer to it as “Christian genocide” because hundreds of thousands of innocent and defenceless Muslims are also being subjected to mass murder, ethnic cleansing, crimes against humanity and displacement and have had their homes, farms, Mosques and hospitals bombed into rubble and burnt to the ground by the terrorists of Boko Haram, ISWAP, Al Qaeda and Ansaru.

    We cannot make reference to or condemn the genocide that is being unleashed on our Christian population without making reference to and condemning that which is also being unleashed on our Muslims.

    What is good for the goose is good for the gander and we must not inflamme people’s passions with reckless and nonsensical rhetoric that seeks to place one set of victims on a higher pedestal and the other on a lower one.

    The monuemental challenges that we face when it comes to this matter are grave: we must not make matters worse and allow ourselves to be plunged into an avoidable and unnecessary full scale religious war as a consequence of the reckless and unrestrained expression of uncontrollable and pent up passions, loose talk and an indulgence in extravagant and costly semantics.

    The bottom line is as follows.

    Do we have a terrorist problem in Nigeria? “Yes!”

    Are Christians being killed by the terrorists? “Yes!”

    Are Muslims being killed by the terrorists as well? “Yes!”

    If that is the case let us call it what it is: the genocide of BOTH Christians and Muslims by a group of heartless beasts from hell who seek to wipe us all out and impose their barbaric ways and values on those of us that they conquer, enslave and leave alive.

    The solution to the problem is for us to come together and eliminate every single one of them and to expose and target their foreign and local sponsors and supporters.

    The solution is NOT to sit in the comfort of our homes, fuelling further division and joining a bunch of excitable, bellicose, intellectually challenged and low-intelligence qouta reprobates in screaming the worne-out and increasingly irritating battle-cry and mantra of “Christian genocide” at the top of their voices whilst fantasising about some far-fetched, infantile and puerile “crusade” in Nigeria to be led by a group of illusionary Christian Knights and Knight Templars galloping in on white horses from Trump’s America who, whilst singing “Onward Christian Soldiers”, will storm our shores and attempt to deliver our Christian community from evil.

    Such vainglorious and delusional fantasies and masturbatory dreams are indeed profound symptoms and glaring evidence of some form of mental illness on the part of those who share them and provide a veritable source of comic relief for the rest of us.

    May God heal their broken minds and grant them good health.

    • (Chief Femi Fani-Kayode is the Sadaukin Shinkafi, the Wakilin Doka Potiskum, the Otunba Joga Orile, the Ajagunle Otun Ekiti, a former Minister of Culture and Tourism, a former Miinister of Aviation, a former Senior Special Assistant and spokesman to President Olusegun Obasanjo and a lawyer
  • Insecurity: Senate to tackle U.S. over ‘Christian Genocide’ label on Nigeria

    Insecurity: Senate to tackle U.S. over ‘Christian Genocide’ label on Nigeria

    • Violence knows no religion, says Red Chamber
    • Lawmakers to engage American lawmakers, others

    Barring any last-minute changes, the Senate will today debate a motion seeking to correct what it called “dangerous misrepresentations” of the country’s security challenges over a campaign of “Christian genocide” by some foreign media outlets and others.

    The motion, titled: “Urgent need to correct misconceptions regarding the purported ‘Christian Genocide’ narrative in Nigeria and International Communities,” is sponsored by Senator Mohammed Ali Ndume (Borno South) and co-sponsored by Senators Sani Musa (Niger East), Magatakarda Wamako (Sokoto North), Ibrahim Bomai (Yobe South), Ahmed Aliyu Wadada (Nasarawa West), and several others.

    In the draft motion sighted by our reporter in Abuja, the senators expressed concern over what they called “increasing circulation of misleading narratives” in both local and international spaces, alleging a systematic genocide against Christians in Nigeria.

    The lawmakers acknowledged the tragic and unacceptable attacks suffered by Christian communities in various parts of the country, saying the violence in Nigeria has affected citizens of all faiths, including Muslims and adherents of other religions.

    They warned that mischaracterising the ongoing security crisis in purely religious terms “risks inflaming sectarian divisions, distorting international understanding, and undermining national unity”.

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    The motion reads: “The Senate: Aware that Nigeria is a multi-ethnic, multi-religious nation whose unity and stability depend on mutual understanding, responsible communication, and accurate representation of facts;

    “Concerned about the increasing circulation of narratives — both within and outside Nigeria — alleging an ongoing ‘Christian genocide’ in the country, which have been amplified by certain foreign media outlets, advocacy groups, and religious networks;

    “Further concerned that these narratives, though emotive, often fail to reflect the complex realities of Nigeria’s security challenges and may fuel sectarian mistrust, distort international perceptions, and undermine national cohesion and Nigeria’s diplomatic relations;

    “Notes that Nigeria has in recent years faced serious security challenges, including terrorism, insurgency, banditry, communal conflicts, and targeted attacks which have affected citizens across various religious, ethnic, and regional backgrounds, resulting in loss of lives and property among both Christian and Muslim communities;

    “Notes that the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended) guarantees freedom of religion, equal protection of the law, and obliges the government to secure the lives and property of all citizens, irrespective of faith or ethnicity;

    “Recognises the critical role of accurate information and responsible leadership in preventing sectarian division and countering extremist narratives;

    “Worried about the recent events in the U.S. Senate and Congress, where they have taken initiatives to designate Nigeria as a ‘Country of Particular Concern,’ which is a foreign policy tool to target human rights or religious freedom violations.”

    The lawmakers are to pray the Senate to: “Reject the blanket characterisation of Nigeria’s security crises as a ‘Christian genocide,’ and affirm that the ongoing conflicts are rooted in complex socio-economic, ethnic, criminal, and terrorist dynamics which cut across religious lines.

    “Urge the Federal Government, through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Security agencies, and relevant stakeholders, to intensify data-driven public communication by providing accurate casualty figures, context, and investigative outcomes to counter misinformation.

    “Call on religious leaders, Civil society organisations, and the Nigerian media to exercise restraint and responsibility in their public statements and reporting, avoiding language that could inflame sectarian tensions or misrepresent the national situation.

    “Encourage diplomatic missions, especially the U.S. Embassy, International organisations, and foreign media to rely on verified, balanced, and credible sources—including Security agencies, local communities, and independent observers—when reporting on religiously sensitive issues in Nigeria.

    “Mandate the Senate Committees on Foreign Affairs, Information, National Security and Intelligence; and any relevant committee as may be deemed appropriate) to:

    “Work with the Executive to develop a coordinated national communications strategy to clarify misinformation on religious violence;

    “Engage the U.S. Senate and Congress; International partners and Diaspora networks through official briefings and fact-based publications to correct misconceptions;

    “Support interfaith peacebuilding programmes that emphasise shared victimhood and national unity.

    “Urge the Federal Government to ensure justice and accountability for all victims of violent attacks — whether Christian, Muslim, or otherwise — to address impunity and rebuild public confidence in state institutions.”

    If adopted, the Senate’s resolutions are expected to form the basis of a coordinated diplomatic and public information effort aimed at correcting international opinions about religious violence in Nigeria.

    The United States recently expressed “deep concern” over the persistent violence targeting Christians and other vulnerable groups in Nigeria, urging the government in Abuja to take stronger measures to protect its citizens from terrorist attacks.

    The statement followed remarks by American comedian Bill Maher, who highlighted the growing number of Christians killed by extremist groups, including Boko Haram and ISIS-West Africa.

    In a statement to Newsweek, the U.S. State Department confirmed it had repeatedly raised the issue with the Nigerian government at the highest levels.

    Maher recently cautioned Western media for ignoring what he described as the ongoing genocide against Christians in Nigeria.

    Speaking on his HBO show “Real Time with Bill Maher” on September 26, Maher accused news outlets and political elites of deliberately staying silent while Boko Haram, Islamic State in West Africa Province (ISWAP), and Fulani militias slaughtered Christians and raze churches across Nigeria.

    “Nigeria, the fact that this issue has not gotten on people’s radar, it’s pretty amazing,” Maher said. “If you don’t know what’s going on in Nigeria, your media sources suck. You are in a bubble.”

    The comedian, who is an outspoken critic of religion but often uses his platform to highlight uncomfortable truths, compared the violence to a full-scale genocide.

    “I’m not a Christian, but they are systematically killing the Christians in Nigeria. They’ve killed over a hundred thousand since 2009. They’ve burned 18,000 churches. These are the Islamists, Boko Haram. This is so much more of a genocide attempt than what is going on in Gaza. They are literally attempting to wipe out the Christian population of an entire country,” he said.

    During the show, U.S. Congresswoman Nancy Mace (Republican, South Carolina) thanked Maher for raising the alarm, stressing that the media had failed to cover the crisis with the urgency it deserved.

    Reacting to the claim, the Federal Government of Nigeria dismissed such reports, suggesting that terrorists in Nigeria are carrying out a systematic genocide against Christians, describing such claims as “false, baseless, despicable, and divisive”.

    In a statement, the Minister of Information and National Orientation, Mohammed Idris, described portraying Nigeria’s security challenges as a targeted campaign against a single religious group as “a gross misrepresentation of reality”.

    The minister stressed that terrorist groups target people of all faiths.

    “The violent activities of terrorist groups are not confined to any particular religious or ethnic community. These criminals target all who reject their murderous ideology, regardless of faith. Muslims, Christians, and even those who do not identify with any religion have suffered at their hands,” he said.

  • Christian genocide and the conspiracy against Nigeria

    Christian genocide and the conspiracy against Nigeria

    By Femi Fani-Kayode 

    I listened attentively to the words of 

    @billmaher & @CNN’s @VanJones68 who have both accused Nigeria of indulging in “Christian genocide” and pondered on them deeply. 

    If, as a Nigerian, their words and narrative do not concern you or scare you then, as @realDonaldTrump would say, you cannot be a very bright bulb.  

    When one adds their words to the recent contribution of @SenTedCruz, the greatest defender of Israel and advocate of ‘Christian Zionism’ in the American Senate, where he accused Nigeria of the same and where he said that he was introducing a Bill in the  Senate to do “something about it” and “protect Christians in Nigeria” then you will get an even clearer picture of what is unfolding and the horrendous agenda those behind it have in store for us. 

    To add to that is the alarming resolution, passed two days ago, by the Canadian Parliament that Nigeria is one of the most dangerous places in the world for Christians to live and that Christians are targetted and slaughtered here all over the country on a daily basis. 

    The first question that needs to be answered is since when have the Americans and the West generally cared about anyone but themselves, least of all the Christians in our country. 

    How come they have suddenly started mouthing this fake battle cry and how come the same rhetoric is suddenly coming out of places like the Canadian Parliament and other western capitals? 

    The sooner those in power in Nigeria and the Nigerian people themselves get a clear grasp of what is really going on the better. 

    More importantly we need to do something to counter the narrative and we need to do it fast. This is because it is spreading like wildfire all over the world and sadly people are buying into it. 

    The truth is that the Americans,  their allies and their local collaborators are carefully and craftily preparing the ground for a religious war in our country and they want us to tear ourselves apart. 

    There can be no doubt that Christians have been targetted and killed in Nigeria in huge numbers by Islamist terrorists, whether they be Boko Haram or ISWAP, over the last 14 years but it is also a fact that as many Muslims have been targetted and killed by the same Islamist terrorists over the same period of time. 

    There are two points that need to be made and properly understood. 

    Firstly the terrorists that have plagued our nation and slaughtered our people, both Christian and Muslim, for the last 14 years were established, armed, funded and protected by the very same Americans and their western and Israeli allies that are crying more than the bereaved today. 

    Worse still they refused to sell arms to us or allow us to buy arms from anywhere in our attempt to resist the terrorists ourselves. Remember that? 

    They even refused to designate Boko Haram as a terrorist organisation for many years and did not do so until it suited their purpose. 

    The second point to grasp is that the reason that they are now all talking about Nigeria and what they have labelled as “Christian genocide” is not because they love Nigeria or care about Nigerian Christians but because they want to shift the world’s attention away from Gaza and focus it on Nigeria. 

    They also want to punish us for  taking a bold stand at the United Nations against the genocide that the Israelis have unleashed on Gaza which they are supporting and funding. 

    Standing up for humanity: that is our “crime” and I for one, as a Nigerian, make no apology for it. 

    In my view it was indeed our proudest moment and finest hour when our Vice President stood before the world at the United Nations and boldly proclaimed that we were against the genocide that was being unleashed on the Palestinian people, condemned what was going on in Gaza and insisted on a two state solution to resolve the conflict. 

    Unlike others we did not sit on the fence or buckle and sadly we are now paying the price for it. 

    This is the reason for their sudden venom, subversion and malice and we must not for one moment think otherwise or delude ourselves into believing that they really care. 

    Let me be clear: there is nothing wrong with them wanting to help our country fight the terrorists and neither is there anything wrong in them showing concern. 

    As a matter of fact that would be a welcome development. 

    What is wrong and unacceptable is the false narrative that they are peddling that it is Christians alone that are being killed. 

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    The question that needs to be answered is why is it being framed in this way?

    Yes Christian lives matter but do Muslim ones not matter too? If we are counting Christian bodies should we not count Muslim ones too? 

    If they had said that terrorists were killing Nigerians of all faiths their concern would have been welcome. 

    But when they say only Christians are being killed and they are attempting to stir up the hearts and souls of Christians from all over the world to unleash a crusade on us in the name of defending Nigerian Christians that gives cause for concern and the perpetuation and sustenance of such a wicked and distorted narrative and agenda which will not end well for our country. 

    As a matter of fact it would tear us apart, swell the ranks of Boko Haram and ISWAP, alienate the Muslim population in our country, divide our ranks, encourage more violence and conflict, exacerbate both religious and ethnic tensions and eventually lead to chaos and carnage in our nation the likes of which we have never seen before.

    Brother will kill brother and we will end up fighting a never-ending civil war which is precisely what they want. 

    This is why this new-found rhetoric from the West is so dangerous. 

    We must join hands as Nigerians and re-emphasise our unity, our plurality of faith and our pride in our nation and we must resist this insidious attempt to divide us with a false narrative that, if we do not manage carefully, will push us over the cliff.

    If there was a Christian genocide going on in Nigeria I would be the first to expose, oppose, resist and fight against it because my faith is EVERYTHING to me.

    The reality is that it is not a Christian genocide that is going on in our country but rather a genocide against all Nigerians, both Christian and Muslim, and it is being perpetuated by a heinous, evil ISIS-inspired and Al Qaeda-like group of barbaric and savage terrorists and criminals that take pleasure in killing people of all faiths. 

    They do not represent Muslims but rather satan. And in other countries that have been afflicted in a similar way both Muslims and Christians have joined forces to fight them. 

    That is what we need to do here and we must not allow the Americans or anyone else to divide our ranks and make us think otherwise. 

    We cannot win the war against terror by turning on ourselves. 

    We welcome the concern of our detractors but we reject their false narrative and their attempt to divide and destroy us.

    Permit me to end this contribution with the following. 

    A number of years ago I was amongst those that erroneously believed that only Christians were being targetted and subjected to genocide by the terrorists in Nigeria. 

    This was the case until 2020 when I went on a tour of the North West and North East and discovered that as many, if not more, Muslims and Muslim communities had been targetted and subjected to mass murder, ethnic cleansing and genocide as the Christian ones in that area.  

    What I witnessed in Zamfara, Sokoto, Katsina, Kaduna, Yobe, Borno, Bauchi, Adamawa, Gombe and other parts of the majority Muslim core North shocked and shattered me and constrained me to accept the assertion that this was not an onslaught against Christians and Christian communities alone but rather an attack on Nigerians of every faith. 

    And it is the same in the Middle Belt where these evil demon-possesed barbarians are targetting and slaughtering Christians and Muslims in equal measure.  

    For example I discovered that they attacked Niger, Kwara, Nassarawa and Kogi states and their predominantly Muslim communities as much and as frequently as they attacked Benue, Plateau and Taraba which are predominantly Christian states. 

    From the day I came to appreciate all this I took an oath before God and man that I would speak out against the atrocities being perpetuated against not just Christians but also Muslims. 

    I also accepted the fact that to do anything other than that would not only be inherently intellectually dishonest but also would add to the problem and make it worse rather than solve it. 

    The sooner we accept the fact that we are all victims of the same evil and heartless beasts the better it will be for us all. 

    What we must never do is accept the bogus narrative or harbor the perfidious notion that the West is trying to establish that only Christians are being killed in our country. 

    As Christians we are, after all, meant to be our brothers keeper and as human beings we are meant to feel the same degree of pain and I daresay shame when either innocent and defenceless Christian or Muslim men, women and children are murdered in cold blood in our shores.

    When the barbarians drop their bombs, wield their machetes, fire their RPG’s and shoot their AK47’s they do not ask their victims what faith they belong to.  

    The notion that they do is as asinine and far-fetched as it is ignorant and mischevous. 

    Beasts don’t care whether you are Christian or Muslim when they knock at your door: they only care about spilling your blood and taking your life.

    May God guide us all, may He grant us peace and may He bless, defend and protect the Federal Republic of Nigeria. 

    (FFK)