Wednesday, October 8, 2025 - Human rights activist and African Action Congress (AAC) presidential candidate, Omoyele Sowore, has accused both the United States and the Nigerian government of hypocrisy in their response to the ongoing killings across the country.
Sowore said Nigeria’s violence is caused by bad governance
and insecurity, not religion, warning against portraying it as persecution of
Christians or Muslims.
He was reacting to renewed calls by some U.S. lawmakers,
urging Washington to label Nigeria as a “Country of Particular Concern” (CPC)
over alleged Christian persecution.
According to him, such claims are misleading and fail to
reflect the real situation in Nigeria.
“There’s genocide against the poor, against Muslims, against
Christians, against children. Trying to separate it by religion is dishonest,”
Sowore said.
He argued that Nigeria does not identify victims by
religion, saying, “The country doesn’t check who carries a Bible or a Koran
before counting the dead.”
Sowore also criticized the U.S. for ignoring similar crises
elsewhere.
“Why is the U.S silent about Gaza, where Muslims are being
killed by Israel? That’s international hypocrisy,” he said.
He insisted that insecurity in Nigeria cuts across all
regions and religions, stressing that the real cause is failed leadership.
“In a country where thousands are killed daily, no one calls
the government genocidal. The problem isn’t religion—it’s irresponsible
leadership and widespread insecurity,” he added.
Sowore pointed out that most attacks happen in the northern
part of the country, affecting both Muslims and Christians.
“In the North, gunmen even attack mosques. Just
recently, 35 worshippers were killed, and the attackers were likely Muslims
too,” he said.
He warned that blaming religion only helps Nigerian leaders
escape responsibility.
“When the U.S. says it wants to protect Christians, that’s
not a solution. If all Christians were taken away, people would still be
killed,” he argued.
Sowore concluded that unless the government tackles
corruption and insecurity directly, Nigerians of all faiths will continue to
die.
Meanwhile, U.S. lawmaker Riley M. Moore has urged Secretary
of State Marco Rubio to act against Nigeria over what he described as the
“systematic persecution of Christians.”
In a letter dated October 6, 2025, Moore called Nigeria “the
deadliest place in the world to be a Christian” and asked Washington to
consider halting arms sales to the country until the killings stop.

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