Monde Jun 27, 20264Add to bookmarks

After the Kawel massacre on June 22, the violence continues in another form: students and teachers have been abducted. Nigerian bishops are demanding their return. ACN and Open Doors are documenting a terror that targets the future of Christian communities.
We had reported on the massacre in Kawel (Bokkos, Plateau State) on the night of June 22–23, 2026: at least 28 dead according to LifeSiteNews, telecommunications cut off before the assault, houses set ablaze—a modus operandi now documented in Nigeria’s Middle Belt. The violence continues in another form: Crux Now reports (June 27, 2026) that Nigerian bishops are publicly demanding the safe return of recently kidnapped students and teachers. Neither the location nor the number of victims is specified in the available dispatch, but the formal episcopal reaction indicates the severity of the event. Aid to the Church in Need (ACN) and Open Doors maintain their estimates: 52,000 Christians killed in Nigeria since 2009; the country remains one of the deadliest places for persecution in the world.
The kidnapping of students and teachers is a deliberate extension of terror beyond immediate physical violence: it is the future of Christian communities that is being targeted. Depriving a generation of access to education means breaking the ability of local churches to train their future catechists, seminarians, doctors, and teachers. The Nigerian bishops' demand is a prophetic act in a country where the federal state remains structurally unable—or unwilling—to protect Christian minorities in Plateau State and the Middle Belt. The silence of the international community remains deafening.
"I am sending you out like sheep among wolves." (Mt 10:16). Pray specifically for the missing students and teachers, and for the families of Kawel. Support ACN (aed-france.org), which concretely accompanies communities in the Middle Belt.
52,000 Christians killed in Nigeria since 2009 (AED & Open Doors estimates)
For the safe return of kidnapped students and teachers
For the families of the victims in Kawel
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C’est bien de prier, mais ça suffit pas. Pourquoi personne ne parle des armes qui arrivent là-bas ?
Chibok en 2014, et maintenant ça recommence... On prie, mais est-ce que les gouvernements bougent vraiment ?
C’est terrible, ces gamins enlevés alors qu’ils vont juste à l’école… Si on touche à l’éducation, c’est tout l’avenir du pays qui est pris en otage.
C’est vrai que sans État pour les protéger, ces gamins n’ont même plus le droit d’apprendre en paix. Où est la police, où est l’armée ?
Les évêques ont raison de parler, mais est-ce que ces enlèvements sont vraiment organisés ou juste des bandits qui profitent du chaos ?
Nigeria : la persécution silencieuse dans la Middle Belt