Nairobi, 20 August, 2025 / 9:40 pm (ACI Africa).
Catholic Pontifical and charity foundation, Aid to the Church in Need (ACN) International, has raised concern about the growing religious extremism in Africa, with cases of persecution emerging in countries that historically were peaceful.
ACN’s Religious Freedom Report (RFR) 2025 highlights the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) in Central Africa as one of the countries that have started to experience increasing jihadist attacks, adding to countries such as Nigeria where persecution of Christians is the highest in the world. The other country that is of major concern in the ACN report is Burkina Faso.
In an interview published by ACN ahead of RFR’s launch slated for October 21, the editor-in-chief of the report highlights Africa as the continent of major concern regarding worsening religious extremism.
“One of the continents where the situation, especially during the last decades, has really gotten worse is Africa, where we see that religious extremism has really grown,” Marta Petrosillo says in the interview published on Tuesday, August 19.
She adds, “We see many Jihadist groups perpetrating more attacks, including in countries where interfaith relations were not a problem. Take the Democratic Republic of Congo, for instance. Historically there have not been problems between faith communities, and it is majority Christian, but we just witnessed a major attack on Christian faithful.”






