Nigerian Christians massacred as Blinken visits Abuja
Christian Solidarity International calls for end to killings in Middle Belt
The massacres came as U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken made an official visit to Nigeria on January 23 and 24, and just three weeks after Blinken refused, for the third year in a row, to designate Nigeria as a “country of particular concern” for religious persecution.
On Tuesday afternoon, CSI’s sources in Plateau State reported that Fulani militia fighters were moving on motorbike to attack Christian villages in Mangu.
By Wednesday, the attacks had killed at least 25 Christians, including a family of six who were burned alive in their home in Sabon Kasuwa village. A church in the same village was burned down.
In recent years, attacks by Fulani militias in Nigeria's Middle Belt have killed more Nigerians than attacks by Boko Haram or the Islamic State. These attacks, directed at farming communities inhabited by indigenous Christian people groups, have displaced hundreds of thousands of people from their homeland since 2018.
In an impassioned video statement shared on social media, the local chairman of the Christian Association of Nigeria in Mangu local government area stated that the Nigerian military was complicit in the attacks.
“The military are the ones sending our people away to allow the militia to burn their houses,” he charged. “They have set a curfew,” but it is enforced “only on people within Mangu, within the Christian domains."
Military forces had themselves killed three young men in the area, including one of his parishioners, the pastor said. “There is an evil plan to destroy Mangu.”
On Christmas Eve1, hundreds of Christians in Plateau State were massacred by Fulani militias going from village to village in Bokkos, Barkin Ladi, and Mangu local government areas.
At a joint press conference2 with Nigeria’s Foreign Minister, Yusuf Maitama Tuggar, Blinken extended “the condolences of the American people to all Nigerians who were affected by the horrific attacks over the Christmas weekend.”
According to reporting by Morning Star News’s Nigeria correspondents, more than 136 Christians have been killed in Nigeria since January 1.
Nigeria is the deadliest country in the world for Christians. In 2020, CSI issued a Genocide Warning3 for Christians in Nigeria.
CSI's international president, Dr. John Eibner, commented, “We urge the U.S. and its allies to address these killings in their dealings with the Nigerian government, rather than continuing to turn a blind eye to the slow genocide unfolding in Africa’s most populous nation.”
Morven McLean
CSI
morven.mclean@csi-int.org
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1 https://www.csi-int.org/news/christmas-attacks-in-nigeria-thousands-of-plateau-residents-displaced/
2 https://www.state.gov/secretary-antony-j-blinken-and-nigerian-foreign-minister-yusuf-maitama-tuggar-at-a-joint-press-availability/
3 https://www.csi-int.org/news/csi-issues-genocide-warning-for-christians-in-nigeria/