PRESS RELEASE
CHRISTIAN SOCIAL MOVEMENT OF NIGERIA (CSMN)

BLACK PALM SUNDAY 2026: Government as Accomplice to Terrorism

The Christian Social Movement of Nigeria (CSMN) expresses anguish over the murder of 34 Christians at Angwan Rukuba in Jos City, on Palm Sunday, 29th March 2026. The CSMN mourns with the families affected in the carnage. We pray that God will comfort and strengthen them to bear the loss.

The attack against Christians on 29th March 2026 follows a pattern of unprovoked yet dastardly attacks on unarmed Christians in the Northern and Middle Belt regions of Nigeria. The convoluted conspiracies about a "clash" between "herders" and "farmers" has again crashed, as the attack was on no farmland and the attackers were herding no livestock. It has purely been Islamist terrorism based on Islamic jihad, in violation of Section 38(1) and Section 10 of the 1999 Constitution (as amended).

Over the years, there have been similar attacks against Christians during Christian festivities, as follows:

  • Christmas Day 2011 – Boko Haram launched a series of coordinated attacks on Christians in Madalla (near Abuja), Jos, Gadaka, and Damaturu. Over 41 Christians were killed
  • Easter 2012 – At least 38 Christians were killed by a suicide bomber in Kaduna. The target was an ECWA Church, but the device detonated premature.
  • Easter 2019 – In Gombe State, along the Gombe-Biu Road, a vehicle rammed into a procession of the Boys Brigade, killing 11 Christian children.
  • Christmas Eve 2023 – Coordinated attacks by Fulani militia at Mangu, Bokkos, and Barkin Lardi in Plateau State, with no less than 259 Christians killed.
  • Easter Monday, 1st April 2024 – multiple villages in Plateau State were attacked by the Fulani militia. On the first day of the attack, 39 Christians were killed, while additional 29 Christians were killed in follow-up attacks spanning a period of two weeks.
  • Christmas 2024 – Dozens of Christians were killed in Benue State by the Fulani militia.
  • Palm Sunday 2025 – At Bassa LGA in Plateau State, 56 Christians (including children) were killed in a night attack by the Fulani militia, so far conspiratorially designated as mere "herders."
  • 21st April 2025 – On Easter Monday, at Biliri LGA in Gombe State, a truck driver deliberately rammed into a Christian procession, killing 6 and injuring many others.
  • The 2025 Christmas attack plans were fortunately foiled by the strike of the United States on terrorist locations in Sokoto State.

The attack on Christians in Jos on Sunday 29th March 2026 is a painful reminder of the shoddy handling of the war on terror by the Federal Government. Thus far, the Government has been acting in slow motions that have provoked intelligent fingers pointing at it as an accomplice or enabler of the terrorists. Many concerns lead to that sad conclusion.

  1. A Government that could hurriedly and effectively cross the border to quell a military coup d’etat in Benin Republic has strangely been unable to quell terror attacks at home, which makes logical Nigerians and the wider world wonder about charities that so often begin abroad.
  2.  Instead of decisively eradicating Islamic terrorism in Nigeria, the government has been absorbing terrorists into the Nigeria Army and especially other security infrastructures as “repentant terrorists.” Some of them have been accused of working for their terrorist peers on the other side of the front lines.
  3. So far, the very provocative and inflammatory statements of Sheik Abubakar Gumi, in outright support for and endorsement of the terrorists, have not been checked by the government. Many Nigerians worry that if that had been a different Nigerian, the story would have been remarkably different.
  4. The military Chief of Defense Staff, in a recent statement, excused blood-thirsty terrorists as “prodigal sons” who should be welcomed back home. Did the prodigal son of the Bible shed the blood of innocent people? We wonder why the Chief of Defense Staff, General Olufemi Oluyede, did not quote Genesis 9:6, which commands that if a man sheds blood, by man should his blood be shed.

The CSMN condemns these terror attacks and the ongoing Islamist insurgency in Nigeria. The Movement equally condemns the apparent complicity of the present administration in these terror attacks, and calls to account the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Sa’ad Abubakar, for poor and weak leadership over Muslims in Nigeria. As the traditional ruler of the Fulanis, every Fulani terrorist is his subject, whom he has the revered powers to restrain. Furthermore, as President of the Supreme Council of Islamic Affairs in Nigeria, the Sultan cannot absolve himself of criminal negligence over terror attacks being perpetrated by killers whose usual war cry, on such dastardly missions, is their common religious refrain.

The Christian Social Movement of Nigeria hereby calls on the international community to intervene in the ongoing genocide against Christians in Nigeria. More people have been killed and are being killed in Nigeria by ethnoreligious Islamist insurgents than are killed in Palestine. All lives are sacred.

CSMN sympathizes with all suffering Nigerians for the anguish they have had to endure under a government that has broken faith with the people and failed to comply with Section 14(2)b of the Constitution which states, “the security and welfare of the people shall be the primary purpose of government.” The security and welfare of Nigerians do not appear to be the primary purpose of the present administration.

God bless Nigeria.

Bosun Emmanuel
CEO/Executive Secretary
Christian Social Movement of Nigeria (CSMN)

31st March 2026