Jos, 28 October, 2025 / 2:46 pm (ACI Africa).
Bishop Matthew Hassan Kukah of the Catholic Diocese of Sokoto in Nigeria has decried the wave of killings and insecurity in the West African nation and termed the situation “a national tragedy.”
Speaking at the launch of Aid to the Church in Need’s 2025 World Report on Religious Freedom in the World at the Augustinian Patristic Pontifical Institute in Rome, Bishop Kukah lamented that Nigerians “are dying for a living” amid continued attacks, which he said have blurred the line between criminality and religious persecution.
The report that was being launched, the Nigerian Catholic Bishop said, “reveals a worrying decline” in global respect for religious freedom, with “more than 5.4 billion people living in countries without religious freedom.”
The Local Ordinary of Sokoto Diocese, since his Episcopal Ordination in September 2011, lamented that for over 15 years, extremist groups such as Boko Haram and other jihadist militias have “ravaged communities, displaced thousands, and destroyed livelihoods,” leaving parts of northern and central Nigeria desolate.
While earlier narratives attempted to frame the conflict as “farmer-herder clashes or mere criminality,” Bishop Kukah said the deliberate targeting of churches, schools, hospitals, priests, and seminarians shows that “we are dealing with religious persecution, especially of Christians.”






