November 21, 2025

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Bola-Tinubu66

The United States House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Africa on Thursday held a tense hearing on Nigeriaโ€™s redesignation as a Country of Particular Concern, with lawmakers, officials and witnesses sharply divided over claims of widespread Christian persecution in the country.

At the centre of the debate was former President Donald Trumpโ€™s decision to return Nigeria to the CPC list over what he described as an โ€œongoing Christian genocide,โ€ even threatening that the US military could โ€œenter Nigeria guns-a-blazingโ€ to eliminate extremist groups he accused of carrying out mass atrocities.

Chaired by Congressman Chris Smith, the hearing sought to assess the scale of religious persecution, examine possible US policy actions, and evaluate whether Nigeriaโ€™s government was doing enough to curb attacks. Senior State Department officials Jonathan Pratt and Jacob McGee appeared before the committee, followed by experts and religious leaders including Nina Shea, Bishop Wilfred Anagbe of Makurdi Diocese, and Ms Oge Onubogu of CSIS.

Smith opened the session with stark statistics, claiming that 89% of all Christians killed for their faith worldwide are Nigerians, and accusing militant Fulani herders of committing murders, kidnappings, and sexual violence with โ€œtotal impunity.โ€ He argued the attacks were clearly religiously motivated and criticised previous US administrations for relaxing pressure on Abuja.

State Department official Jonathan Pratt warned that extremist violenceโ€”driven by Boko Haram, ISWAP, ISIS Sahel, Ansaru and othersโ€”was now spreading far beyond the North-East, especially into the Middle Belt. He said terrorists, separatists, and criminal militias increasingly targeted Christian communities, insisting that Nigeria must prioritise protection for vulnerable groups.

According to Pratt, the US is developing a coordinated plan involving the State Department, Treasury, and the Department of War aimed at compelling Nigeria to improve religious freedom protections and strengthen security for Christian communities. He said the current Nigerian administration had shown willingness to cooperate since the CPC redesignation.

Some lawmakers strongly backed the move. Representative John James described Nigeria as โ€œthe deadliest place on earth to be a Christian,โ€ citing tens of thousands of killings since 2019. He also linked religious persecution to political repression, referencing the detention of IPOB leader Nnamdi Kanu and criticising Nigeria for ignoring domestic and international court rulings ordering his release.

In response to questions, Pratt dismissed claims that the Nigerian government had been infiltrated by extremist groups, stating that there was no evidence to support such allegations. He confirmed, however, that the Tinubu administration had taken the CPC designation seriously and dispatched a senior delegation for high-level meetings in Washington.

Congressman Bill Huizenga delivered an emotional critique of Nigeriaโ€™s handling of religious violence, accusing the government of failing to protect Christians, moderate Muslims, and others terrorised by militant groups. He also questioned whether US humanitarian aid was reaching millions of displaced persons in Benue and Taraba states.

Another lawmaker, Johnny Olszewski, expressed concern that Nigeria lacked the capacity to shield communities from armed groups responsible for mass killings. He stressed that while the government may not intentionally persecute any religious group, the scale of violence by extremist organisations remained alarming.

The hearing ended without consensus, reflecting growing divisions in Washington over how to respond to Nigeriaโ€™s complex security challenges and whether religious persecution should remain central to US policy toward Africaโ€™s most populous nation.

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