Fulani militants kill 29 Christians during Easter worship services in Nigeria
Fulani gunmen stormed two church services in northern Nigeria on Easter Sunday, killing at least 12 Christians in Kaduna state as congregants gathered to worship. In a separate pre-dawn attack in Benue state, suspected Fulani herdsmen killed 17 more, bringing the combined Easter death toll to at least 29.
The attacks targeted Christians at their most vulnerable: mid-prayer, gathered in houses of worship, on the holiest day of the Christian calendar. Dozens more were abducted and dragged into the surrounding forests, according to the Christian Post. Both church buildings in one town were damaged. Homes were destroyed. Survivors were displaced.
The world barely noticed.
Easter Morning in Ariko
The first attack hit Ariko town in Kachia County, Kaduna state. Worshipers had gathered at an Evangelical Church Winning All site and at St. Augustine Catholic Church when a large force of Fulani militants surrounded the community.
Kachia Council Member Mark Bawa described the assault to Christian Daily International–Morning Star News:
"The attackers, who have been identified as Fulani bandits, were in large numbers. They surrounded the community and attacked the churches as Christians were in worship services. Many Christians have been killed, while dozens of others were captured and taken away into the bush."
Resident Steven Kefas texted a message while the assault was still underway, writing that "Ariko community in Kachia Local Government Area of Kaduna state is under siege right now." He confirmed at least eight dead at that point. Army personnel who later arrived recovered more bodies, and the outlet Truth Nigeria confirmed the death toll had risen to 12.
Resident Gideon Michael identified the assailants as Fulanis and described the violence as coordinated:
"The coordinated attack targeted congregants at ECWA Church and St. Augustine Catholic Church. At least eight Christians are confirmed dead, with dozens of other worshipers abducted by the herdsmen and forcefully taken into the surrounding forests."
A coordinated, multi-site assault on two churches simultaneously. That is not a spontaneous clash between herders and farmers; the framing is often applied to minimize these attacks. That is a planned military-style operation against Christian civilians.
Before Dawn in Benue
Hours before the Ariko attack, at 5 a.m. on Easter Sunday, armed Fulani militia struck Jande village in Mbalom, Gwer East County, Benue state. They killed 17 Christians.
Resident Tivta Samuel confirmed the attack to Christian Daily International–Morning Star News. Resident Fidelis Atom described its aftermath:
"Many other Christians are still missing and believed to have been taken away from their community. The attack has left the community devastated, with survivors displaced and properties worth millions of naira destroyed."
Benue Governor Hyacinth Alia described the attack as "heinous" and called it unacceptable to his government. A single adjective in a press statement. That was the official response to 17 of his constituents being slaughtered during Easter worship.
The Persecution No One Talks About
Nigeria is, by the numbers, the most dangerous country on earth to be a Christian. Open Doors' 2026 World Watch List, covering October 1, 2024, through September 30, 2025, documented 4,849 Christians killed worldwide for their faith during that period. Of those, 3,490, a staggering 72%, were Nigerians. That figure was up from 3,100 the prior year.
Nigeria ranks No. 7 on Open Doors' list of the 50 countries where Christians face the most severe persecution. A 2020 report by the All-Party Parliamentary Group had already flagged the crisis years ago. The killing has only accelerated since.
The Fulani, numbering in the millions across Nigeria and the Sahel, include militant factions that have waged a sustained campaign of violence against Christian communities in Nigeria's Middle Belt and northern regions. The pattern is consistent:
- Attacks timed to worship services or Christian holidays
- Coordinated strikes on multiple locations
- Mass abductions alongside mass killings
- Destruction of homes and churches
- Minimal government response and no sustained accountability
If any other religious group were being slaughtered at this rate, in this manner, on their holiest days, the international outcry would be deafening. There would be UN resolutions. There would be celebrity campaigns. There would be front-page coverage in every major Western newspaper.
Instead, Nigerian Christians are dying in near-total silence.
Selective Outrage
The same Western institutions that mobilize instantly over perceived slights to other religious minorities have nothing to say about the systematic massacre of African Christians. The same voices that lecture endlessly about "marginalized communities" go mute when the marginalized community in question is Christian. The same foreign policy establishment that finds moral urgency in a dozen other causes treats the mass killing of Nigerian believers as a regional nuisance.
This is not a new observation. It is a damning one, made worse by repetition. Every Easter, every Christmas, every ordinary Sunday, the attacks come. And every time, the world's silence confirms what Nigerian Christians already know: their lives do not register on the conscience of the international order.
Twenty-nine people went to church on Easter morning. They went to celebrate the Resurrection. They were murdered for it. Dozens more were dragged into the bush, their fates unknown.
Somewhere, the people who did this are planning the next attack. And somewhere else, the people with the power to stop it are planning to say nothing at all.



