Monday, August 11, 2025 - The United States government, under Donald Trump, has denounced the brutal attacks on Christians in Nigeria and other parts of sub-Saharan Africa.
The administration labelled the violence as horrific and
pledged to collaborate with global partners to tackle the crisis.
The White House and the State Department have vowed to
respond decisively.
The Trump administration condemns in the strongest terms
this horrific violence against Christians,” the White House said.
The statement comes after a series of deadly attacks in
recent weeks, including the massacre of 27 Christians in the Nigerian village
of Bindi Ta-hoss by Islamist Fulani militants. Eyewitnesses recounted harrowing
scenes, with many victims, including women and children, being burned alive
while sheltering in a church.
“I lost my wife and second daughter in the attack,” survivor
Solomon Sunday told reporters. “They were burned alive.”
In another incident on July 27, 49 Christians were
slaughtered with machetes during prayers in the eastern Democratic Republic of
Congo.
Authorities blamed Islamist militants from the Allied
Democratic Forces (ADF), a group linked to ISIS.
Across the region, Islamist extremist groups—including Boko
Haram and ISIS West Africa—are accused of systematically targeting Christians
for killings, displacement, and land seizures.
Human rights organisations warn that the violence amounts to
an ongoing campaign of “ethno-religious cleansing.”
John Eibner, president of Christian Solidarity
International, told Fox News Digital that in Nigeria’s Plateau State alone,
more than 165 Christians have been killed in the past four months.
“Such grisly proceedings have become commonplace in central Nigeria,” Eibner
said.
“It is part of a longstanding process of violent
Islamisation and ethno-religious cleansing. Last Palm Sunday, 50 Christians
were similarly slaughtered in nearby Bassa. Over 64 communities in Plateau have
now been seized by armed Fulani militants.”
Eibner added that massacres of this kind are increasingly
occurring in predominantly Christian regions such as Congo and Mozambique.
“There is no simple solution,” he warned.
Local youth leader D’Young Mangut expressed frustration over
the lack of action: “People are being killed like chickens, and nothing is
being done.”
According to Open Doors, more Christians are killed for
their faith in Nigeria than in the rest of the world combined.
Over the past decade, jihadist violence in sub-Saharan
Africa has claimed an estimated 150,000 lives and displaced more than 16
million Christians.
Religious leaders say the attacks are part of a systematic
attempt to establish an Islamic state in parts of Nigeria.
Bishop Wilfred Anagbe, who lost 20 parishioners in a recent
assault, accused militants of pursuing an “unchecked and deliberate” campaign.
Victims’ families, meanwhile, say they are “tired of condolences” and are
demanding real security measures.
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