
"Trump's rhetoric risks recasting criminal violence and state failure as a religious war with devastating consequences for civilians. In early November, United States President Donald Trump declared that Christianity is facing an existential threat in Nigeria. In a series of posts on his Truth Social platform, he accused radical Islamists of mass slaughter and warned that the US may very well go into that now disgraced country, guns-a-blazing."
"In mid-November, a new wave of school abductions revealed how perilous parts of northern Nigeria have become for children of all faiths. On November 17, armed men raided Government Girls Comprehensive Secondary School in Maga, Kebbi State, killing a vice principal and abducting 25 students. The school was state-run, and the victims were Muslim girls. One escaped, and the remaining 24 were later rescued."
"Days later, in the early hours of November 21, gunmen stormed St Mary's Catholic Primary and Secondary School in Papiri, Niger State, abducting pupils and teachers. While some captives later escaped or were released, many remained missing into mid-December, leaving families in agonising uncertainty. Parents continue to wait without answers, their desperation and anguish hardening into anger as official assurances fade."
"Taken together, these attacks do not reflect a campaign of religious persecution. They follow a pattern that has become increasingly familiar across northern Nigeria: mass kidnapping for ransom, striking opportunistically rather than along religious lines. Trump's remarks do more than misdiagnose this violence. They reimagine it. With a few lines of incendiary rhetoric, a country grappling with criminal insecurity and institutional collapse is recast as a front line in a civilisational struggle a place where force, not reform, becomes the implied solution."
Rhetoric that casts Nigeria's insecurity as a religious war conflates criminal violence and state failure with ideological persecution. Claims that Islamist militants are selectively targeting Christians ignore recent attacks on Muslim schools and mixed-faith victims. A wave of mass kidnappings in northern Nigeria reflects opportunistic ransom-driven crime rather than coordinated religious persecution. Abductions of students and teachers have left many missing and families in agonising uncertainty, with desperation turning to anger as official assurances fade. Reimagining the problem as a civilisational struggle privileges force over institutional reform and risks devastating consequences for civilians.
Read at www.aljazeera.com
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