
Christians Under Fire: Escalating Attacks by Herdsmen in Nigeria’s Middle Belt
In late August 2025, Christian farmers in North-Central Nigeria endured renewed violence at the hands of Fulani herdsmen, marking yet another tragic chapter in a long-standing conflict over land and resources. The latest assault, in Bauchi State, left one Christian man dead and three others wounded after finding their farmland being grazed upon unlawfully.
Five Christians from Gumel village in Tafawa Balewa County visited their farms on 27 August and discovered cattle grazing where crops should have been. When they confronted the herdsmen, they were met with violence. According to Reverend Samson Habila, local chair of the Christian Association of Nigeria in the area, one man was killed and three others injured. The wounded were first taken to the General Hospital in Tafawa Balewa, then referred to Jos University Teaching Hospital for more serious treatment.

Earlier that same week, the Pyekman community also suffered brutal raids. On 25 August, two Christian women and a teenage boy were assaulted as they walked home from their fields. One woman was slashed across the hand, the teenager also suffered machete wounds, and a second woman had her ear cut off. Scores of Christian farmers have also lost large portions of their crops after the herdsmen allowed their cattle to roam freely over farmland.
Community leaders are calling this a distressing escalation. Ishaku Komo, a Zaar tribal leader, expressed heartbreak at the series of attacks in Tafawa Balewa and beyond, including the killing of Mr Irmiya Yohanna in Bogoro Local Government Area. “We as leaders and the voice of our people unequivocally condemn these senseless acts of violence,” Komo said. He urged fellow residents to remain calm, even in these frightening times.
Dangerous Times
These attacks come amidst broader instability across Nigeria’s North-Central zone. Nigerian authorities have recently rebranded their security operations there: on 29 August, they replaced “Operation Safe Haven” with a new initiative called Operation Enduring Peace. According to the military leadership, the change is meant to improve response speed, strengthen cooperation among security agencies, engage more with local communities, and use intelligence to anticipate, rather than merely react to, violent outbreaks.

Yet for many Christians living in Nigeria’s Middle Belt, such changes offer little comfort when daily life continues to be marred by danger. Open Doors’ 2025 World Watch List puts Nigeria among the worst places globally for Christians, reporting that out of 4,476 Christians killed for their faith worldwide during the period, some 3,100 (69%) were in Nigeria. It highlights how mostly Muslim herder militias in the Middle Belt keep targeting Christian farming communities—destroying crops, killing innocent people, and displacing families.
Church leaders are calling the violence what it is: not simply random clashes, but part of a pattern of land grabs, cultural tension, and religious persecution. Many believe herdsmen are pushing into traditionally Christian areas, especially as desertification and climate pressures force nomadic herders southward. These conflicts over land have become intertwined with religious identity.
As the prayers rise and the communities mourn, one urgent plea is consistent: Christians and all people of conscience must unite in prayer, action, and advocacy. Those affected ask for peace, justice, and the protection of their homes, farms, and lives — for the land to yield fruit, and for the violence to end.
For more stories and to stay informed about the persecution of Christians worldwide, visit Voice of the Martyrs Australia. You can subscribe to our free monthly magazine and download the Voice of the Martyrs Australia app to receive daily prayer updates.
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Images courtesy of Voice of the Martyrs Australia.
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Thank you for the post.