The Catholic Register

'This is Genocide': hundreds slain in Nigeria

2025-06-17-NigeriaWomenPrayMass.png

Women are pictured in a file photo praying during Mass at Holy Rosary Catholic Church in Abuja, Nigeria.

OSV News photo/Afolabi Sotunde, Reuters

Fredrick Nzwili
Fredrick Nzwili
OSV News
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Nairobi, Kenya

After a scene of horror in which around 200 people were “brutally killed” in Yelwata, in Benue state, Nigeria, Pope Leo XIV prayed for the victims, calling it a “terrible massacre.”

Despite extreme persecution, the Catholic Church grows in the country, with a record number of confirmations and Mass attendance. 

Most of those killed in the recent tragic events were internally displaced persons “sheltered by the local Catholic mission,” Vatican News reported. 

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Speaking just before delivering the Sunday Angelus prayer, the Pope prayed for “security, justice and peace” in Nigeria, adding that he was thinking in particular of the “rural Christian communities of the Benue State who have been relentless victims of violence.”

Responding to the attack on June 14, Amnesty International Nigeria called on the country’s authorities to “immediately end the almost daily bloodshed in Benue State and bring the actual perpetrators to justice.”

The advocacy group Save the Persecuted Christians said that overnight between June 13 and 14, “Muslim Fulani militants raided a predominantly Catholic Christian town” outside of the town of Makurdi, “killing hundreds, say early reports from contacts within the Catholic Diocese of Makurdi.” The group said that “infants, toddlers and the elderly are among the butchered and burnt bodies. Fleeing victims were shot and hacked with machetes and thrown back into the fire.”

Save the Persecuted Christians suggested the attacks were retaliation for Bishop Wilfred Anagbe of Makurdi’s testimony before the U.S. Congress and at the U.K. Parliament this spring.

In the British Parliament in March, Anagbe talked about how his flock have seen their homes torched and been forced to flee to camps set up for people who are internally displaced, according to the pontifical charity Aid to the Church in Need

The bishop said that Benue state, which includes Makurdi and nearby Yelwata, has been attacked by Islamist extremists and Fulani herders targeting Christian communities and has seen farmers driven from their land, churches burned and priests, religious and lay members killed.

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“The militant Fulani herdsmen bear on defenseless villagers without consequence,” Anagbe said.

“They follow orders to conquer, kill, and occupy. They attack even those who have managed to escape into our IDP camps.”

He added that for his people, their experience today “can be summed up as that of a Church under Islamist extermination.”

Save the Persecuted Christians added in their June 14 X post: “This is Genocide.”

At the beginning of June, at least 85 people were killed in coordinated waves of attacks in a span of a week in Benue state. The attacks began on June 1, when armed Fulani ethnic militia attacked Gwer West and Apa counties killing at least 43 people. Similar attacks earlier in Gwer County left another 42 people dead and thousands displaced.

Benue Concern Youths, a local advocacy organization, expressed the people’s frustration in a letter to the state governor.

“Innocent lives have been lost once more,” Unaji Pax Romana, the group’s spokesman said in the letter. “We look to you for leadership and hope.”

The Nigerian bishops’ conference condemned earlier in June what it called a “barbaric massacre” of innocent citizens in Benue state.

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“These cold-blooded attacks on defenseless communities where countless have been slaughtered, homes destroyed and families left in anguish — are an affront to God, a stain on our shared humanity and a terrifying reminder of the utter  breakdown of security in our land,” said Archbishop Lucius Iwejuru Ugorji  of Owerri, and the president of the bishops conference.

Despite growing and horrific persecution, Nigerian Catholics hold tight to their faith. The confirmation of nearly 1,000 Catholics in Nigeria has underscored the growth of the church in the West African country. Auxiliary Bishop Ernest Obodo of Enugu Diocese, in the southeastern part of the country, conferred the sacrament of confirmation on 983 people at the Holy Ghost Cathedral on June 4. 

A version of this story appeared in the June 22, 2025, issue of The Catholic Register with the headline "'This is Genocide': Nigerian Catholic 'massacre'".

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