19/11/2025
My critics who twist my words and push the insensitive and cruel lie that I ever claimed Christians are not being killed in Nigeria — or that we bury empty coffins — are spreading a monstrous and unforgivable falsehood.
Christians are being hunted down and slaughtered across this country in staggering numbers, and anyone who denies it, minimizes it, or tries to rewrite the truth is nothing but a perfidious propagandist, a genocide enabler, and a shameless liar.
Yet let this also be made clear without ambiguity: Muslims too are being targeted and massacred by the very same terrorists. The bloodthirsty killers laying waste to this nation draw no distinction between church and mosque — they are executing us all.
The 25 girls abducted in Maga, Kebbi — and the viciously butchered Vice Principal — were a mix of Christians and Muslims.
The 64 abducted and 3 slaughtered in Tsafe, Zamfara were Muslims.
The Catholic priest and 12 girls kidnapped in Kagarko, Kaduna were Christians.
Even our military officers, including a Brigadier General cut down in Borno, were both Christian and Muslim.
These Islamist terrorists represent no faith, no God, no ideology beyond death.
Their only mission is bloodshed, abduction, domination, and the destruction of innocent lives.
They revel only in terror, pillage, mass murder, land-grabbing and grotesque cruelty.
And now some people dare whisper amnesty?
To creatures who feel no remorse?
To butchers who see human life as expendable?
Never. Never. Not today, not ever.
There is only one language these beasts understand — force.
It is the duty of the Federal Government and the Armed Forces to summon the courage, the strength, the will and the absolute resolve to crush them mercilessly and dispatch them back to the hell they crawled out of. Time is running out.
What will not solve this crisis is twisting it into a Christian vs. Muslim narrative, or entertaining the reckless fantasy of an American invasion, which would plunge Nigeria into deeper chaos and hand the terrorists an even greater victory.
We need clarity. We need unity. We need strength.
And above all, we need to pray for Nigeria — because forces that wish to divide, destabilize and destroy this nation are already working overtime.
Nigeria must not become another Congo, Somalia, Darfur, Sudan, Gaza, Afghanistan, Libya, Iraq, Lebanon, or Syria — a shattered state consumed by proxy wars and foreign interests.
Nigeria must not be reduced to a battleground for competing superpowers or greedy imperial interests hungry for resources.
This is the moment to set aside our differences.
To stand firm.
To stand united.
To stand shoulder to shoulder — Christian and Muslim — against a common, murderous enemy.
Our survival depends on it.