By Emmanuel Nduka Obisue
U.S. President Donald Trump has claimed that Christians in Nigeria are facing an “existential threat,” a statement that has sparked renewed debate over religious violence in Africa’s most populous country.
In a post on his Truth Social platform, Trump said “thousands of Christians are being killed” and blamed “radical Islamists” for what he described as a “mass slaughter”. He further declared that he would name Nigeria a “country of particular concern” for “severe violations of religious freedom”.
However, experts and analysts say Trump’s claims oversimplify a complex web of conflicts in Nigeria, where violence has claimed lives across religious lines.
“Boko Haram and Islamic State affiliates are killing more Muslims than Christians,” said Massad Boulos, Trump’s senior advisor for Arab and African affairs, in an earlier comment this month.
According to data from the U.S.-based Armed Conflict Location and Event Data (ACLED) project, violence in Nigeria has been largely indiscriminate, with over 52,000 civilians killed since 2009 in attacks by jihadist groups, armed bandits, and communal militias. Between 2020 and 2025, ACLED recorded 389 incidents targeting Christians, resulting in 318 deaths, and 197 attacks against Muslims, leading to more than 400 fatalities.
Nigeria’s conflicts stretch across several regions, from jihadist insurgencies in the northeast to banditry in the northwest, and recurring clashes between mostly Muslim herders and Christian farmers in the central states. Experts say these clashes are often driven more by land disputes, population pressures, and climate change than by religion itself.
The latest remarks come amid lobbying efforts by groups linked to Nigerian separatist movements. Documents filed in the U.S. show that Moran Global Strategies, representing the Biafra Republic Government in Exile, wrote to Congress earlier this year, warning of “Christian persecution” in Nigeria.
Analysts have warned that framing the conflict as one-sided risks inflaming tensions further.






























