In Niger State, Intersociety reports of “incessant abductions, killings, torture, disappearances, forced marriage, sexual harassment including child defilement, population displacement, forced migration and forced Islamic conversions.”
“The State also recorded the highest number of anti-Christian abductions and killings in Northern Nigeria and presently serves as headquarters of the country’s Alliance for Islamic Jihad in Nigeria,” reads the Intersociety report.
There were also 550 deaths in Nigeria’s Kogi State, Edo with 505 deaths, Borno State which recorded estimated 420 Christian deaths. Taraba State accounted for estimated 320 Christian deaths.
Delta State, Intersociety says, has also become “a flashpoint” for attacks by Jihadist Fulani Herdsmen against indigenous Christian farmers and non-indigenous travelers using the State’s major Highways.
The State, according to the report, has recorded no fewer than 216 Christian deaths, followed by Katsina with 200 Christian deaths, Cross River State withn60 Christians deaths and Bauchi with 50 Christian deaths.
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Intersociety says that it collected the data from the affected communities and other sources including local and international media, human rights groups, and research organizations, religious and socio-cultural groups.
The Nigerian Military also accounted for no fewer than 410 Christian deaths, mostly in the South-East following indiscriminate abductions, killings and disappearances using false labeling, mass criminalization and ethno-religious profiling of Southeasterners since the beginning of January.
The number of Christian abductees across the country was found to have swollen by an upsurge in the abduction of Southeasterners, Nigeria’s most traveled population and a handful of other non-Southeasterners.
In terms of kidnappings, Niger State is the worst hit in the Intersociety report with estimated 1000 abductions since the beginning of January, followed by Southern Kaduna with estimated 800 abductions.
Other Nigerian that witnessed over 500 abductions each include Plateau, Kogi, Borno, Benue and Katsina.
There were hundreds of other abductions also witnessed in other states across Nigeria, as highlighted by the Intersociety report.
In the report, Umeagbalasi claims that Nigeria has provided a safe haven to some 22 islamist terror groups in Africa who he says are “seeking to obliterate Christianity and indigenous cultural heritage and impose sultanate in Nigeria by 2075.”
According to the Intersociety official, the designation of Nigeria as “a Country of Particular Concern and Jihadist Fulani Herdsmen and Jihadist Fulani Bandits as Entities OF Particular Concern “, particularly by the United States, and similar punitive measures by EU, UK and Canadian leaders “is not only belated and long overdue”, but should go an extra mile.
He says, the forces, some in key religious positions who are backing the Fulani militias “must be banned from traveling to Religious Freedom respecter countries including US, Canada, UK, France, Germany and other members of the European Union.”
Agnes Aineah is a Kenyan journalist with a background in digital and newspaper reporting. She holds a Master of Arts in Digital Journalism from the Aga Khan University, Graduate School of Media and Communications and a Bachelor's Degree in Linguistics, Media and Communications from Kenya's Moi University. Agnes currently serves as a journalist for ACI Africa.