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After the Palm Sunday Bloodshed: Nigerian Christians Face Easter Under the Shadow of Unbroken Violence
On the evening of March 29, 2026, gunmen riding motorcycles and wearing military camouflage stormed the Angwan Rukuba community in Jos North Local Government Area, Plateau State, opening fire on residents at approximately 7:30 p.m. local time [1]. Fourteen people died at the scene. Thirteen more died at a local hospital. The final confirmed toll stood at 27, though some reports from church organizations and local media placed the figure above 40 [2][3].
The attack fell on Palm Sunday — the beginning of Holy Week for Christians worldwide. For Nigeria's Middle Belt, it was the latest entry in a calendar of violence that has, with a regularity that aid workers describe as seasonal, targeted Christian communities during their most significant religious observances.
With Easter days away, the question facing millions of Nigerian Christians is blunt: will the holiday pass without more bloodshed? The evidence from the past decade offers limited grounds for confidence.
What Happened in Angwan Rukuba
Eyewitness accounts describe a coordinated assault. The attackers arrived on motorcycles, dressed in military-style clothing, and fired indiscriminately into the community before withdrawing [4]. Plateau State Governor Caleb Manasseh Mutfwang imposed a 48-hour curfew on Jos North starting at midnight on March 29 [5]. When the curfew was partially relaxed two days later, sporadic violence broke out across parts of the city, and residents took to the streets in protest [6].
The identity of the perpetrators remains disputed. Some witnesses blamed Fulani militia; others pointed to Boko Haram affiliates [2]. The Nigerian Army pushed back against social media allegations that its troops had provided cover for the gunmen, calling the claims "unfounded" [7]. The Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria (MACBAN), the main Fulani herder advocacy group, condemned the attack as "barbaric" and called for the perpetrators to be brought to justice — while accusing unnamed "religious leaders" of fueling violence through "reckless and inflammatory rhetoric" [8].
The Government's Response
President Bola Tinubu vowed that "perpetrators won't go unpunished" [9]. Federal Information Minister Mohammed Idris announced that security agencies had been directed to identify, apprehend, and prosecute those responsible [10]. Inspector-General of Police Kayode Egbetokun deployed additional tactical teams and Police Mobile Force units to Plateau State and sent the Deputy Inspector-General in charge of Operations to coordinate the response [11].
The Human Rights Writers Association of Nigeria (HURIWA) was less reassured. The group condemned the massacre and urged both President Tinubu and Governor Mutfwang to move beyond statements toward "concrete, verifiable action" [12].
A Pattern Measured in Thousands
The Palm Sunday attack did not occur in isolation. It belongs to a documented pattern of escalating violence against communities in Nigeria's Middle Belt — the geographic and cultural fault line between the predominantly Muslim north and the largely Christian south.
Open Doors, the international Christian watchdog organization, reported in its 2026 World Watch List that 3,490 of the 4,849 Christians killed worldwide for their faith during the most recent reporting period were Nigerian — roughly 72 percent of the global total [13]. That figure represented an increase from 3,100 the previous year. Nigeria ranked seventh on the organization's list of countries where Christians face the most severe persecution, and it was one of only three sub-Saharan African countries (alongside Sudan and Mali) to receive the maximum score for anti-Christian violence [14].
The numbers from other organizations are higher. Intersociety, a Nigeria-based human rights group, reported that more than 7,000 Christians were killed in the first 220 days of 2025 alone, averaging 30 to 35 deaths per day [15]. Christian Solidarity International reported that more than 120 Christians were killed in Plateau State attacks in a single wave during 2025 [16].
These figures are contested. The Nigerian government has historically reported lower casualty numbers, and some scholars argue that advocacy organizations focused on religious persecution may count deaths from communal and criminal violence that are not primarily motivated by faith. The discrepancy between official tallies and those of church bodies and international watchdogs remains a persistent point of contention.
Holiday-Season Attacks: A Recurring Pattern
The timing of the Angwan Rukuba attack follows a pattern that Nigerian Christians and security analysts have tracked for years. In the days before Christmas 2025, at least 20 Christians were killed in coordinated attacks across Benue and Plateau states [17]. International Christian Concern reported that Nigerian authorities had received intelligence warnings about the Christmas attacks but failed to act on them [17].
Between December 2023 and February 2024, at least 1,336 people were killed in Plateau State alone, with tens of thousands displaced [18]. The 2010 Jos riots — among the most lethal outbreaks in the region's history — killed hundreds during the Christmas and New Year period and remain a reference point for the scale of violence the Middle Belt has experienced.
A U.S. congressman cited the pattern explicitly, warning that "Abuja knows this pattern and they must massively ramp up security for the Triduum and Easter" [19].
Displacement and the Humanitarian Gap
The human cost extends well beyond the death toll. Nigeria now has approximately 3.6 million internally displaced persons, making it the seventh-largest displacement crisis globally [20].
In Benue State alone, over 2 million people have been displaced by farmer-herder violence, with roughly 30 percent living in camps [21]. The humanitarian response has not kept pace: Nigeria's humanitarian response plan funding declined from nearly $1 billion annually to $585 million in 2024 and just $262 million in 2023 [22]. The UN's 2025 Humanitarian Needs and Response Plan identified the gap as a growing crisis, with health, food, and shelter needs far outstripping available resources [22].
A January 2026 UN News report noted that the "violence roiling Nigeria extends beyond religious lines, amid a deepening humanitarian crisis," highlighting that Muslim communities in the northwest were also experiencing severe displacement from banditry and criminal violence [23].
The Impunity Problem
The most consistent feature of post-massacre politics in Nigeria is the absence of prosecution. Human Rights Watch documented in a 2013 report that Nigerian authorities had "turned a blind eye to mass killings" in the Middle Belt, and the pattern has continued [24].
After the 2010 Jos killings, the federal attorney general for the first time prosecuted some suspects in federal court, and state prosecutors secured several convictions [18]. But in many of the largest massacres from that period, no one was arrested or charged, even when witnesses identified perpetrators to police [24].
More recently, following the December 2023–February 2024 attacks in Plateau that killed over 1,300 people, the Nigerian government established commissions of inquiry. A Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect policy brief noted that such commissions have historically "become a way to reinforce impunity" — their reports are shelved, recommendations go unimplemented, and perpetrators face no consequences [25].
President Tinubu's pledge after the Palm Sunday attack that perpetrators "won't go unpunished" echoed nearly identical language from previous administrations after previous massacres [9]. No arrests connected to the Angwan Rukuba attack had been publicly announced as of April 2, 2026.
Easter Security: Churches Adjust, Forces Deploy
With Easter approaching, security preparations have intensified, though their adequacy is debated.
The Inspector-General of Police ordered "massive deployment" of security assets to churches, recreational centers, and critical locations across affected states [11]. The Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) announced visible deployments in Kwara State and said similar operations were underway in other states [26]. Governors in Benue, Kaduna, Katsina, and Plateau held a joint security dialogue in Jos, facilitated by the UK-funded Strengthening Peace and Resilience in Nigeria Programme [27].
Churches themselves have taken precautions. Multiple Catholic dioceses across Nigeria moved their Easter Vigil Masses from nighttime to 5 p.m., a decision Bishop Jude Ayodeji Arogundade of Ondo Diocese announced on March 30 to reduce the risk to congregants [28]. The U.S. Embassy issued a security alert on April 2 reminding American citizens that "terrorist attacks can happen anywhere, often without warning" [29].
Whether these measures are sufficient is a separate question. HURIWA characterized previous security deployments as "performative" and called for a "fundamental restructuring" of how the federal government approaches protection of civilian populations in the Middle Belt [12]. Security analysts have noted that attackers in previous incidents struck in areas where military forces were nominally deployed, raising questions about both coordination and complicity.
The Framing Debate: Religious Persecution or Land Conflict?
The deadliest fault line in the public discourse around Middle Belt violence is whether it should be understood primarily as religious persecution of Christians or as a multi-causal communal conflict over land, water, and political power.
Organizations like Open Doors, International Christian Concern, and Genocide Watch frame the violence as targeted persecution. Genocide Watch has explicitly warned of "genocidal" patterns in the killing of Nigerian Christians by Fulani militias [30]. U.S. Senator Ted Cruz cited the killings in a congressional address accusing the Nigerian government of enabling "mass murder" of Christians [31].
The counter-argument comes from scholars, secular analysts, and some Nigerian Muslim organizations. Researchers from the Africa section of the French National Center for Scientific Research argued that describing the situation as "pre-genocide" was "inaccurate" and risked "misrepresenting the facts" [32]. A Le Monde analysis stated that "reducing the violence in the center of the country to sectarian confrontation is an extreme simplification" [32]. Scholar Roger Blench has observed that farmer-herder conflicts are "seized on by irresponsible politicians and social media commentators to frame the clashes in religious terms, a narrative which suits those who like simple, science-free analyses" [32].
The Africa Center for Strategic Studies, in a study on farmer-herder conflict across West and Central Africa, noted that the same dynamics of land competition, climate change, and population pressure drive violence in regions where both farmers and herders are Muslim — a fact that complicates a purely religious explanation [33].
MACBAN has repeatedly argued that Fulani herders are also victims, citing attacks on their communities in Plateau State. In February 2026, the organization's Plateau chapter reported rising attacks on Fulani herders, and in March, it denied that Fulani had "ever grabbed any land in Plateau" [34][35].
The reality, as most analysts acknowledge, is that religion, ethnicity, land competition, climate stress, political manipulation, and criminal opportunism are all present in the violence simultaneously. The question of which factor is "primary" often reveals more about the analyst's framework than about the conflict itself.
What Comes Next
The days between now and Easter Sunday will test whether the security measures announced this week amount to more than the familiar cycle of post-massacre promises. Nigerian Christians in the Middle Belt have heard these assurances before — after the 2010 Jos riots, after the 2023 Christmas attacks, and after each wave of violence in between.
The structural conditions that drive the conflict remain unchanged: competition over shrinking arable land in the Middle Belt, a security apparatus that has not prevented or adequately responded to repeated attacks, a justice system that has convicted almost no one for mass killings, and a humanitarian funding gap that leaves millions of displaced people without adequate support.
For the congregations that will gather in Nigerian churches this Easter — many of them hours earlier than tradition dictates, in deference to the threat of violence — the question is not abstract. It is whether the state can protect them, and whether it will try.
Sources (35)
- [1]Plateau Attack: Gunmen In Military Uniforms Kill Several On Palm Sunday, 48-Hour Curfew Declaredsaharareporters.com
Gunmen wearing military camouflage attacked the Angwan Rukuba community in Jos North LGA around 7:30 p.m., killing at least 14 on the spot.
- [2]Dozens Killed During Palm Sunday Attacks in Nigeriapersecution.org
International Christian Concern reports at least 53 Nigerians killed in multiple Palm Sunday attacks targeting Christian communities in north-central Nigeria.
- [3]Palm Sunday Massacre in Jos: Over 40 Christians Killed247news.com.ng
Over 40 Christians reportedly killed in Angwan Rukuba during Palm Sunday attack in Jos North.
- [4]Nigeria: Plateau - Death Toll Rises to 27 As Residents Recount Ordealallafrica.com
Death toll in the Angwan Rukuba attack rises to 27 as survivors describe attackers in military camouflage arriving on motorcycles.
- [5]Jos Palm Sunday killings: Nigerian govt reacts, reveals next line of actiondailypost.ng
Federal Government directs security agencies to ensure perpetrators of Angwan Rukuba attack are identified and brought to justice.
- [6]Angry Plateau Residents Protest Over Deadly Jos Attacknaijanews.com
Residents defied curfew restrictions and took to the streets in protest following the Palm Sunday massacre.
- [7]Did Troops Provide Cover for Gunmen During Jos Killings on Palm Sunday? Army Reactslegit.ng
The Nigerian Army denied social media allegations that troops provided cover for gunmen during the Palm Sunday attack.
- [8]Jos attack: Perpetrators must be brought to book - Miyetti Allahdailypost.ng
MACBAN condemned the attack as 'barbaric' while accusing religious leaders of fueling violence through inflammatory rhetoric.
- [9]Plateau killings: Perpetrators won't go unpunished - Tinubu vowsdailypost.ng
President Tinubu pledged that those responsible for the Angwan Rukuba massacre would face justice.
- [10]Speech by Minister of Information on Security Situation in Plateau Statethepeoplestalk.com.ng
Minister Mohammed Idris addressed the media on March 31 regarding the government's response to the Plateau State attacks.
- [11]Plateau attack: IGP orders massive deployment, intensifies operationdailypost.ng
Inspector-General of Police deployed additional tactical teams and Police Mobile Force units to Plateau State.
- [12]HURIWA Condemns Palm Sunday Massacre, Urges Tinubu and Mutfwang to Actthenigerian.news
Human Rights Writers Association of Nigeria urged concrete action beyond statements following the Palm Sunday killings.
- [13]Open Doors positions Nigeria as the epicenter of anti-Christian violenceinfovaticana.com
Nigeria accounts for 3,490 of 4,849 Christians killed globally — 72 percent of the worldwide total according to the 2026 World Watch List.
- [14]The 50 Countries Where It's Most Dangerous for Christians in 2026christianitytoday.com
Nigeria ranked No. 7 on the Open Doors World Watch List, one of three sub-Saharan countries with maximum violence scores.
- [15]Nigeria: more than 120 Christians killed in Plateau attackscsi-int.org
Christian Solidarity International documented over 120 Christians killed in Plateau State attacks during 2025.
- [16]Nigeria: Scores killed in Islamist attacks over Christmas and New Yearcsi-int.org
Scores killed in attacks on Christian communities over the 2025 Christmas period in Benue and Plateau states.
- [17]Nigeria Authorities Ignore Missionary Warnings as 20 Christians Killed Before Christmaspersecution.org
At least 20 Christians killed in Benue and Plateau states before Christmas 2025 despite intelligence warnings.
- [18]Plateau killings: Nigeria's endless cycle of bloodshedpunchng.com
Between December 2023 and February 2024, at least 1,336 people were killed in Plateau State with tens of thousands displaced.
- [19]US lawmaker warns over Plateau, Kaduna killingsinsightnewsng.com
U.S. congressman called on Nigeria to 'massively ramp up security for the Triduum and Easter.'
- [20]UNHCR Refugee Population Statistics Databaseunhcr.org
Nigeria has approximately 3.6 million internally displaced persons, the seventh-largest displacement crisis globally.
- [21]Over 2 million Nigerians are displaced by farmer-herder conflict in Benue Statetheconversation.com
Over 2 million displaced in Benue alone, with 30 percent living in IDP camps.
- [22]Nigeria 2025 Humanitarian Needs and Response Planunocha.org
Humanitarian response plan funding declined from nearly $1 billion to $585 million in 2024 and $262 million in 2023.
- [23]Violence roiling Nigeria extends beyond religious lines, amid a deepening humanitarian crisisnews.un.org
UN News reports that violence in Nigeria extends beyond religious lines, affecting Muslim communities in the northwest as well.
- [24]Nigeria: Turning Blind Eye to Mass Killingshrw.org
Human Rights Watch documented Nigerian authorities' failure to investigate and prosecute mass killings in the Middle Belt.
- [25]Atrocities in Nigeria's Plateau State and the Responsibility to Protectglobalr2p.org
Commissions of inquiry have historically reinforced impunity, with reports shelved and recommendations unimplemented.
- [26]Easter: Kwara NSCDC deploys 2,280 personnel for celebrationdailypost.ng
NSCDC deployed security personnel to churches and public gathering points ahead of Easter celebrations.
- [27]Benue, Kaduna, Katsina, Plateau Hold Dialogue to Tackle Insecuritynigerianeye.com
Four Middle Belt and northern states held joint security dialogue in Jos facilitated by UK-funded peace programme.
- [28]Nigerian dioceses to hold Easter Vigil earlier for security concernsvaticannews.va
Catholic dioceses across Nigeria moved Easter Vigil Masses to 5 p.m. to reduce risk of nighttime attacks.
- [29]Security Alert – Nigeria, April 2, 2026ng.usembassy.gov
U.S. Embassy warned that terrorist attacks can happen anywhere in Nigeria, often without warning.
- [30]Nigerian Christians Gunned Down by Fulani Militiasgenocidewatch.com
Genocide Watch warned of genocidal patterns in killings of Nigerian Christians by Fulani militias.
- [31]Ted Cruz blames Nigeria for 'mass murder' of Christians: What's the truth?aljazeera.com
Al Jazeera examined Senator Ted Cruz's claims about mass murder of Nigerian Christians and the complex reality behind the violence.
- [32]Herder–farmer conflicts in Nigeriaen.wikipedia.org
Scholars argue that reducing Middle Belt violence to sectarian confrontation oversimplifies a conflict driven by land, climate, and political factors.
- [33]The Growing Complexity of Farmer-Herder Conflict in West and Central Africaafricacenter.org
Africa Center for Strategic Studies notes farmer-herder conflicts occur across regions where both communities are Muslim, complicating religious explanations.
- [34]MACBAN cries out over rising attacks on Fulani herders in Plateaubusinessday.ng
MACBAN reported rising attacks on Fulani herders in Plateau State in February 2026.
- [35]Fulanis have never grabbed any land in Plateau - MACBANdailypost.ng
MACBAN denied that Fulani communities have seized land in Plateau State.