Comments at the Launch of the ACIN 2025 World Report on Religious Freedom in the World
A Plea & Testimony
from Nigeria
By
Matthew Hassan Kukah, Bishop, Catholic Diocese of Sokoto, Nigeria, Delivered at
the Augustinianum Hall, on October 21st, 2021, Vatican City.
1: I want to thank Aid to the Church in Need for their kind invitation to me to speak in response to the release of their biennial report on, Religious Freedom in the World. The report itself is a huge document of 1248 pages. It covers the state of Religious Freedom around the entire world between Jan 2023 & December 2024. According to the authors, the report reveals a worrying decline that shows more than 5.4 billion living today in countries without religious freedom. It is important to note that this report neither targets a particular country nor a particular faith. It cuts across all faiths and focuses only on the degree to which countries comply with this fundamental human right. The report identifies authoritarianism, religious extremism, ethno-religious nationalism and organized crime as drivers of religious persecution. To rephrase Leo Tolstoy therefore; Every victim of persecution is persecuted differently.
2: There
have been serious concerns nationally and internationally over the
deterioration of security matters in Nigeria. The reports have focused on the
tragic outburst of violence that has turned huge swaths of the Nigerian
landscape into a huge killing field. For over 15 years now, these murderous
gangs of Islamicists and jihadist groups have found their way into our country,
wreaking havoc, destroying lives and properties, ravaging farmlands and leaving
huge parts of the country empty of human existence. Along with this, a culture
of uncontrolled banditry, thousands of communities have been destroyed, with
thousands of lives lost. The country has witnessed an unacceptable surge in
internal displacement in most parts of the north especially around the middle
belt states.
3: The
biggest challenge for us is the appropriate language to use in describing this
tragedy. The reactions have been confusing. Early narratives spoke of
farmer-herder clashes, climate change, cattle rustling, outright criminality,
etc. With the emergence of Boko Haram
and the targeting of Church structures, destruction of schools, hospitals, the
kidnapping of priests, the religious, seminarians and other pastoral agents,
the murderous gangs invoking the words like, allahu akubar as their anthem of
death, there was no other way of speaking of persecution of Christians by these
jihadist groups rather than calling them religious persecution targeted at
Christians. Then came the sacking of communities and the occupation of swaths
of lands by these terrorist and murderous groups. These groups would later
target Muslims who did not believe in their brand of Islam. Today, the floods
of blood in Nigeria have no boundaries. This is why the debate over what is
happening to us has become so confusing within and outside Nigeria. Although we
cannot find the right words, the simple truth is that Nigerians are dying for a
living.
4: The
confusion over the appropriate language is understandable. The greatest area of
concern is how much this tragic turn of events has disrupted years of Nigeria
being a colourful tapestry of wonderful human relationships marked by great
friendships among our people, across faiths and ethnicities. For example, I
live in Sokoto, right in the womb of Islam. If we were dealing with outright
persecution of Christians on grounds of identity, both myself and my small flock
would not exist. For example, on September 8th, 2011, the ceremony of my
ordination and installation as the Bishop of Sokoto was marked by this
exemplary show of collaboration between the Diocese, the state government and
the Sultan who personally enthusiastically provided accommodation for my guests
during the occasion. I received the gift of a new Prado Jeep from a Muslim
friend of mine who said to me, Bishop; This is my gift to you for your pastoral
work in your vast Diocese! On the 30th of September this year, the Sultan
himself was physically in the premises of our Secretariat where we commissioned
an ICT facility with almost 300 computers for youth and children. This is not
to say that there are no problems, but our daily lives should be defined by a
better narrative.
5: We are
therefore not dealing with cases of people who are going around wielding
machetes and looking for me to kill because I am a Christian. I travel in my
official regalia as Bishop in and out of Sokoto. We carry out our religious
services with no molestations. However, what is important is not to create the
impression that we have no problems. We do have serious problems but these have
escalated because the federal and state governments have, over the years
allowed these problems to fester. The inability of the federal government and
its security agencies to end these killings has created the condition for the
genocide that has taken over many communities today. By whatever names we
choose, the fact is that Nigerians are dying unacceptable deaths across the
country. In many cases, they are targeted because of their beliefs but also
because of their ethnicity. We are in the cusp of a weak state with clear lack
of capacity to arrest the descent into anarchy.
6: Nigerians
feel vulnerable and unprotected irrespective of their faiths, ethnicity or
social classes. A significant part of our social life has literally collapsed
as many citizens now fear large gatherings for social events or prayer. It is
important to restate that things were never really always like this. The last 8
years of the Buhari administration marked the worst phase in the history of
interfaith relations in Nigeria, especially relating to violence against
Christians and their exclusion from power. That administration gave oxygen to
jihadists by virtue of its policies which overtly favoured Islam and northern
Nigeria. The President himself was a Muslim, ensured that the Senate President,
the Speaker, the Deputy Speaker, the entire leadership of security was entrusted
to the hands of only Muslims, almost all from the north. This was a departure
from the sensibilities that had characterized power sharing in Nigeria. I
argued then that in reality, the difference between President Buhari and the
Jihadists was that he was using a pen while the jihadists were using weapons of
violence against Christians. I also stated that under Buhari, to gain power, it
was more important to be a northern Muslim than to be a citizen of Nigeria.
7: Today,
sadly, Nigeria is still bleeding. However, I see a window of opportunity that
we could use to restore harmony among our people. The Report acknowledged that
the First Family is an example of what should give hope in Nigeria; with the
President being a Muslim and his wife being a Pastor in a Pentecostal Church!
The President and the Vice President are Muslims, yet Christians have not felt
alienated. The Chief of General Staff of
the Nigerian Army, the Director of State Security Services among others are
Christians. The President just appointed a Christian as the leader of the
ruling Party. He also has appointed a Christian as the Chairman of the
Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC. These are confidence building
measures aimed at inspiring confidence in the citizens about having a sense of
belonging. Our situation is far from perfect. We are still in a bad place, but
there are signs of a government willing to listen. In response to the tragedy
of the horrible killings in Yelwata,
Benue state, the President physically paid a visit and had interactive sessions
with the victims and the state government. It also pledged financial assistance
to the victims. Such actions are different from the Buhari period where the
President largely simply looked the other way without empathy.
8: The report
indicates some decline in terrorist attacks quoting the Global Terrorism Index
Report for2025 which states that terrorist attacks in Nigeria declined by 37%
in 2024. However, the report still notes that; During the reporting period,
innumerable attacks in Nigeria were documented in which the victims’ religious
affiliation played a contributing or decisive role. Religious identity,
particularly Christian identity in the northern states, matters intensely
because it renders Christians (and moderate Muslims) particularly vulnerable to
violence, persecution, and displacement….Religious freedom in Nigeria is under
grave threat, principally due to legal measures that support discrimination
against Christians in the northern states, as well as severe and relentless
atrocities committed throughout the country. It is therefore deeply
discouraging to note that prospects for religious freedom in Africa’s most
populous nation remain extremely grim.
8: This
Report is not meant to make anyone side happy or sad. It is a wake-up call for
Nigeria. The report offers Nigeria and opportunity to stand in the mirror and
decide how it wants to create a country of common citizenship. President Bola
Tinubu ordered Nigeria to return to its old national anthem, emphasizing that
one of the stanzas says, we want to; build a country where no one is oppressed.
Now is the time to live up to these principles. There is an urgent need to
bring all laws, I am mean all, under the purview of the Constitution of the
federal republic of Nigeria.
9: For
years, the agents of state have stood by as individuals took the law into their
hands, destroying churches and killing Christians over the last forty years,
killing innocent citizens of both faiths on grounds of blasphemy laws with the
Hisbah groups seeking to enforce Islamic laws by the backdoor, all with no
repercussion. The dubious decision by 12 northern states to adopt Sharia law in
a Democracy in 2000, opened the door to Islamicists who saw this as a sign that
Islam was on the ascendancy. Things must change. The President should go to
court to have the adoption of the Sharia law by the 12 northern states declared
unconstitutional as the only way to arrest the tendency to mob justice which
continues to claim innocent lives of citizens such as Deborah Samuel (Sokoto),
Bridget Agbahime (Kano). The secular state anticipated by the Constitution must
be enforced.
10: In the
experiences of Christian minorities in northern Nigeria, what constitutes
persecution is not necessarily just violence. It is also the perceived denial
of their rights to access to places of worship in public institutions, refusal
of state authorities to allocate lands for the building of churches, not
reconstructing destroyed churches when fanatics raze them down, denial of
employment opportunities and promotion in public institutions, lack of access
to religious education for Christian children in public schools etc. The right
to what constitutes persecution belongs to the victim. It is left for the state
to gauge these claims against the Constitution.
11: Finally,
I want once again to thank ACIN for their tireless work towards the restoration
of human dignity in the fulfilment of God’s gift to humanity, the right for all
to worship him without let or hindrance. I believe that over the years, Nigeria
has sinned and fallen short. Under the Buhari administration, its egregious
persecution of Christians was visible. I accepted and encouraged the
designation of Nigeria as a Country of Concern. In their statement dated December
11th, 2020, (a day after the Human Rights Day) the Trump administration said:
Governments whose leaders have allowed perpetrators of vicious persecution to
act with impunity pose a national security threat to the United States and the
world.
12: I do believe
that today, acts of impunity still persist, but it is my view that
re-designating Nigeria a Country of Concern will hurt the initiatives we are
working on with the current government to collectively resolve the nagging
problems of first, the persecution of Christians and of course the larger
issues of ending the mindless killings of our citizens. Designating my country,
Nigeria, a Country of Concern will only make our work in the area of dialogue
among religious leaders in our country and elsewhere with the Nigerian state
even harder. It will only increase tensions, sow doubt, open windows of
suspicion and fear and simply allow the criminals and perpetrators of violence
to exploit. What Nigeria needs now is a more vigilance by the organisations
such as the ACIN and civil society groups to continue to press for change and
to deliberately work to end impunity.
12: I
believe that the Obama and Biden administrations were complicit in the way they
handled the fight against Boko Haram under the Presidency of Goodluck Jonathan.
The country was already making progress. The decision to block Nigeria’s access
to the required weapons to end this violence by the Obama administration and
their drive to impose President Buhari on Nigeria pushed back this fight. I
therefore appeal President, Donald Trump who is already working hard to show
that a peaceful world is possible with his historic achievement in the Middle
East to lift the ban and allow Nigeria access the military tools it requires to
free our country from the stranglehold of these evil men. I believe this will
set us on a course to end the violence that extremist groups and merchants of
death have inflicted on us.
13:
Thankfully, in his new Encyclical, Dilexi Te, the holy father, Pope Leo has
said: I am sure that preferential option
for the poor is the source of extraordinary renewal both for Church and
society. Happily, our President, Bola Ahmed Tinubu sent a delegation of the
Catholic Bishops for the burial of our beloved holy father, Pope Francis. He
personally took the historic decision to be at the inauguration of the holy
father, Pope Leo, X1V. We believe that despite our challenges, there is a
window of opportunity to the religious leaders in Nigeria to map out the best
strategies towards national harmony and integration. With the historic
developments in the Middle East coming in this year of Hope, the world has a
chance to reverse the vicious hold of all forms of religious extremism
threatening a peaceful world order. Nigeria, a country of well over 200 million
people of faith can make a great contribution towards this quest for world
peace if we can rid our country of the virus of religious extremism. We should
be supported and encouraged in this effort and not punished. On our part, the
Nigerian government must urgently design a robust template to restore
confidence in our country by taking the concerns expressed in this Report in
good faith. Thank you very much.
No comments:
Post a Comment