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Genocide Against Christians: US Lawmakers Visit to Benue Sparks Global Spotlight

By Paul Kuane, Makurdi
African Writers Centre (AWC)

The recent fact-finding mission by a high-powered delegation of the United States Congress to Nigeria has ignited renewed global attention on the long-standing allegations of mass atrocities, targeted killings, and persecution of Christians in parts of the country—particularly in Benue State.

The delegation, whose visit forms part of a broader congressional inquiry into religious freedom and human rights abuses worldwide, held a closed-door meeting in Makurdi with Catholic bishops, humanitarian workers, and key stakeholders. Their mission: to gather firsthand information on the rising wave of violence that has claimed thousands of lives over the last decade.

THE DELEGATION AND THEIR OBJECTIVE

The congressional delegation—made up of influential lawmakers from the House Foreign Affairs Committee, the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission, and the US Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF)—arrived quietly in Abuja before heading directly to Benue, the epicentre of what church leaders describe as “a slow-burn genocide.”

Sources indicate that the lawmakers are investigating:

  • Claims of systematic attacks on Christian farming communities;
  • Continued displacement of more than 1.5 million internally displaced persons (IDPs) in Benue State alone;
  • Alleged failure of security agencies to prevent or punish attacks;
  • Possible human rights violations amounting to crimes against humanity.

MEETING WITH CATHOLIC BISHOPS: WHAT WE KNOW

In Makurdi, the delegation met with the Catholic Bishop of Makurdi Diocese, Bishop Wilfred Anagbe, a prominent voice who has for years raised alarms over what he calls an “orchestrated ethnic-religious cleansing.”

The bishops reportedly presented:

  • Graphic evidence of destroyed communities;
  • Eyewitness testimonies from survivors of attacks;
  • Satellite images showing scorched farmlands and overrun villages;
  • Data suggesting a pattern linking attacks to armed herdsmen militias and cross-border criminal networks.

One bishop described the situation as “an undeclared war against a people whose only crime is their faith and their land.”

GENOCIDE? WHY THE WORD IS GAINING TRACTION

International legal experts note that the term “genocide” is gaining momentum due to:

  • Consistent targeting of Christian communities;
  • Religious overtones in attackers’ rhetoric;
  • Mass graves, scorched villages, and patterns of displacement;
  • The sheer scale of killings, estimated by civil society groups at over 30,000 deaths in the Middle Belt since 2001.

While Nigeria’s federal government has rejected the genocide label, insisting that the crisis is “criminal, not religious,” the US delegation’s focus suggests Washington may be re-evaluating this stance.

GOVERNOR ALIA’S MEETING WITH THE DELEGATION

Benue State Governor Hyacinth Alia also met the lawmakers, presenting the state’s humanitarian needs and a plea for international partnerships in security, agriculture, and rehabilitation.

He reportedly stressed the urgent need for:

  • Deployment of better-equipped security units;
  • Reconstruction of destroyed communities;
  • International pressure on arms-smuggling routes;
  • Support for IDP camps that have swollen beyond capacity.

MATTERS ARISING: THE GLOBAL IMPLICATIONS

The visit carries far-reaching implications:

1. Possible US Congressional Resolution

The delegation is expected to brief Congress, potentially leading to resolutions condemning the killings or calling for sanctions against entities enabling the violence.

2. New Pressure on the Nigerian Government

Washington may demand firmer security interventions, prosecution of perpetrators, or transparency in handling rural banditry and cross-border terrorism.

3. Religious Freedom Report Reclassification

Nigeria may again risk designation as a “Country of Particular Concern” under US religious freedom laws—a move that could trigger diplomatic consequences.

4. International Aid and Monitoring Missions

The UN, EU, and human rights groups may follow with their own investigations, creating a broader international monitoring framework.

A WAKE-UP CALL ON THE HUMAN COST

Data from local NGOs indicate:

  • Over 200 communities in Benue are abandoned;
  • 1.5 million IDPs are living in crowded camps;
  • Food production in the region has dropped by nearly 50% due to continuous attacks;
  • Thousands of children are out of school, creating a long-term social impact.

CONCLUSION: A TURNING POINT FOR NIGERIA?

The US lawmakers’ visit is not just symbolic—it signals that the world is watching. It underscores that Nigeria’s internal conflict has now become a global human-rights issue and that silence is no longer an option.

Whether this visit leads to international action, sanctions, or new diplomatic pressure remains to be seen. But what is certain is that the narrative has changed: the crisis in Benue has entered the global stage, and accountability is now unavoidable.

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