Friday, January 30, 2026

160 Christians kidnapped while in churches in Nigeria

160 Christians kidnapped while in churches in Nigeria


Armed terrorists stormed three churches in Kaduna State, Nigeria, on Sunday morning, Jan. 18, and abducted at least 160 Christian worshipers in the middle of their services.

They were taken during worship services, marched into nearby forests, and forced toward known terrorist enclaves.  And none of this should have surprised anyone.

One week earlier, TruthNigeria issued a terror alert warning that the Kurmin Wali corridor was facing imminent danger. The area lies within miles of established hostage camps long operated by Fulani Ethnic Militia and allied terrorist groups — camps that have held hundreds of captives for years, documented through survivor testimony, video interviews, and geolocation data.

The threat was known. The terrain was mapped. The pattern was established.

And yet, when armed Fulani Ethnic Militia walked into three churches and carried out one of the largest mass church abductions in Kaduna’s history, the government did not respond with urgency.  It responded with denial.

For two days, local authorities denied that any mass kidnapping had occurred at all. While families searched for loved ones, officials rejected the reports outright. Only after TruthNigeria published detailed documentation of the attack did the government abandon its denial and acknowledge that the abductions had taken place.

That sequence matters because this was not an unforeseeable tragedy.  There was warning of the attacks in a documented terror corridor near permanent hostage camps. And when it happened, the first instinct of the state was not protection — it was suppression.

This is not merely failure; It is a pattern.

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