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"They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail - Politics - Nairaland

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"They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by BlackViper(op): 10:12am On Feb 15
British investigative journalist for the Daily Mail, David Patrikarakos visits areas affected by Fulani insurgents in Plateau State


Driving through the vast, scorched landscape, I hear the words that have followed me all day. ‘They roasted the pastor and his wife alive in the church. We heard their screams."

Plateau State stretches to the horizon. Rich black soil that once grew cassava and sugar cane is now ash. Trees are encrusted with soot. Fields of maize that shone gold in the sun are grey and lifeless, stalk after stalk standing in formation like an army frozen in defeat.

Bricks lie scattered in the scrub. Concrete blocks jut from the earth like jagged teeth. Roofs have collapsed inward.

And then come the churches.

Burned-out shell after burned-out shell. Crosses broken. Windows blown through. One has been gutted by fire, another reduced to rubble.

It’s as though someone has tried to erase every visible sign of Christianity from this land

For more than two decades, this stretch of Nigeria’s Middle Belt – the faultline where the largely Muslim north meets the predominantly Christian south – has convulsed in recurring waves of bloodshed.

According to the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project, thousands have been killed in one state alone since the early 2000s. Nigeria’s Security Tracker estimates that more than 60,000 people have died nationwide in communal and insurgent violence since 2011.

Yet outside Africa, the carnage rarely holds attention. It pierced Western consciousness in 2014 when Boko Haram abducted more than 270 schoolgirls, sparking the global #BringBackOurGirls campaign and drawing figures such as Michelle Obama into the outcry – and then it faded. It flared briefly again last Christmas when Donald Trump ordered air strikes against jihadist targets in the region following renewed attacks on Christian communities, thrusting Nigeria into the centre of American political debate. Then it slipped from the headlines once more.

And yet the religious faultline running through Nigeria mirrors anxieties reshaping politics across Europe and America: identity, migration, demography, religious coexistence. In Nigeria, those tensions are simply sharper – and bloodier.

Nigeria is home to more than 220million people and is projected to approach 400million within decades, on course to become one of the world’s most populous nations.

Plateau State, roughly the size of Belgium, has around four million people wedged into a fragile mosaic of farming villages and grazing routes layered over fertile land and mineral deposits. Add rapid population growth, climate pressures, weak institutions and the long shadow of the jihadist group Boko Haram’s insurgency – which has killed tens of thousands – and the combustible mix becomes clear.

In the face of all this, calling the violence here merely a ‘farmer–herder conflict’, as government officials try to do, begins to sound like a diplomatic euphemism. It’s true that land is in high demand and grazing routes are contested. But that explanation alone feels inadequate when you witness for yourself the ruins of so many churches – and hear the stories of so many slaughtered Christians.

We arrive in the village of Gwet, parking by a collection of abandoned houses, destroyed fields and another ruined church. In truth, we’re not exactly welcome. The people who committed these atrocities – Muslim Fulani herdsmen – can be seen in the distance: the new, unchallenged masters of this once devoutly Christian area.

I’m told that they’d normally slaughter any stranger who dared to come – but unfortunately for them, earlier this morning I met the honourable Dachahat Tongpan, secretary general of the Local Government Area (LGA). This part of the Plateau State has a troubled history.

In 2024, a sickening video circulated online of a Muslim mob beheading a young Christian man here and killing a family of five, including three children. The people remember. After he learned that I had come to investigate violence against Christians, the Secretary General insisted on providing an armed escort

‘You need to see ground zero,’ he told me.

The truck-mounted heavy machine gun would ensure the Fulani left us unmolested.

But word spread. Some Christians who once lived here took the chance to return to their homes for the first time since they were driven out. Reverend Iliya Ayuba Fwangle is the local area chairman of the Christian Association of Nigeria. As we stand together amid the devastation, he turns to me. His immaculate, pinstriped suit clashes with the devastated landscape.

‘We are being displaced,’ he says. ‘Our people cannot farm. Our children cannot go to school. We pray you go back and tell the world about the genocide we Christians are experiencing here.’

The pattern has been identical across the years and locations. Night raids. Armed, baying men descending on sleeping Christian communities. Houses torched; men, women and children cut down or slaughtered in their beds; churches set ablaze. By dawn, whole settlements are smoking ruins.

‘Jonas’ is 29 years old. He cradles his metal machete like a comfort blanket. ‘For firewood,’ he says, ‘but also’, he adds, looking at the Fulani in the distance, ‘for protection.’ We stand in the blackened remains of his family home. This is the first time he’s dared to come back since May 16, 2023: the day his world was destroyed.

He starts to remember. Early that morning, Fulani families had been seen nearby gathering cattle and belongings, moving in unusually large numbers. Within hours they stormed his village screaming ‘Allahu Akbar’ and calling the Christians living there infidels. They fired into homes, chased families out and burned everything they could. They were methodical in their savagery. ‘We were terrified,’ he tells me. ‘We ran and hid in the bush and then fled.’
‘We cannot forget what they did to us,’ says Patricia, left. The Fulani shot her husband dead in front of her
.

Ten people once lived in his home: his parents, wife and younger brothers. They were farmers. Now the Fulani cattle graze the family’s field beyond their ruined church
.

The Islamists murdered Jonas’s father: he shows me the very spot. ‘I shouted to him to run,’ he says. ‘Then I turned around and saw they had shot him. He was lying in his own blood.’ Thirteen people were killed in this village of around 800.

‘The churches are always their main target,’ he says. It is an attack at the heart of their faith. A message written in fire. Christian advocacy group Open Doors reported that the vast majority of Christians killed for their faith globally (between October 2024 and September 2025) were murdered in Nigeria.

Government sources reject the claim, arguing the violence is driven by competition over land, farming and resources rather than religion.
Yet when the killing comes, it is often Christian villages that burn


To drive between villages in Plateau State is to run a gauntlet of checkpoints. These range from official military installations with guard-huts and sandbags to a tree branch dragged across the road. Many are manned by men wearing ‘Special Forces’ emblazoned across faded uniforms – a promiscuous term out here.

We have to be careful, my fixer Abdullahi warns, because bandits erect fake checkpoints to rob travellers – especially at night. We round a bend and another checkpoint comes into view. An armed man leans into our window, looking intently at me. I brace for an interrogation. Then he puts his hand to his mouth: asking for money to eat.

‘Not so Special Forces,’ Abdullahi mutters.

The following morning, we pull into a churchyard smothered in the yellow dirt characteristic of the region. I’m here to meet several ‘internally displaced persons’ (IDP), in the humanitarian jargon – yet more victims of Muslim violence. We are going to discuss one of the worst atrocities in living memory: the Christmas Massacres of 2023.

In 48 blood-spattered hours between December 23 and Christmas Day, mobs attacked at least 17 rural communities in the Plateau areas of Bokkos and Barkin Ladi, murdering at least 200 and injuring 500 more. Although no group claimed responsibility, residents insist it was the Fulani.

They also insist the date was deliberate. In the days before the attacks, warnings had circulated: ‘Be careful how you celebrate Christmas – or you may not celebrate at all.’

Inside a surviving church in Bokkos, I take a chair by the stage alongside a lectern and a drum kit. Music is important to Nigeria’s Christians.

Reverend Silas Caleb Dang takes up the story. As Christians across the world prepared to celebrate the birth of their Saviour, gunfire ripped through the hills here. Houses were already burning when one pastor ran inside his church, locked the door and knelt at the altar.

‘He went inside the church to pray to Jesus,’ he tells me. ‘And they burned him alive.’

In nearby Muong village, the horror was repeated. At around 5pm on Christmas Eve 2023, gunshots were heard in neighbouring villages. By 6.30pm, the attackers were closing in. Sunday B. Randong, a retired civil servant now also displaced, went to the Special Task Force office in Bokkos to raise the alarm, but the officers just laughed and said they lacked personnel.

Soon after, the mob arrived. ‘They torched a house with the pastor’s wife and her five children trapped inside,’ he says, sitting across from me in a mustard-coloured kaftan.

‘They were Fulani. We know this because we heard their names as they shouted to each other: “Burn this house! Burn that house!”

‘It was an anti-Christian attack, no doubt,’ he concludes. ‘They screamed, “Allahu Akbar!” as they fired, calling us all infidels.’


Women and children fled toward a nearby stream, hoping the darkness would hide them, but the Fulani were already there, waiting, Reverend Silas says. ‘They butchered 23 women, children and elderly.’

Across the surrounding villages, local leaders say more than 64 were killed over several days. More than 1,300 houses were destroyed. Churches were gutted. Food stores were looted. Later, cattle were driven into Christian irrigation fields to destroy their crops.

Reverend John Dakwat believes that, apart from any disputes over land or cattle rustling, Christian communities are attacked because of their religion.‘Any village they enter, they make sure they burn the church and kill our holy men,’ he says.

‘They tell us, “If you build a new church, one day we will make it a mosque.”’

In Jos, Plateau’s state capital – at the centre of Nigeria’s religious divide – I see church crucifixes just streets away from minarets. The call to prayer echoes above the corrugated shacks, while the occasional peal of worship music carries in the air.

And, I am repeatedly told, there can never be peace among Christians and Muslims here.

‘We cannot forget what they did to us,’ says Patricia, as her infant children sit beside her in an IDP camp, staring emptily into space. The Fulani shot her husband dead in front of her. Patricia has been in the camp for three years now, with little hope of either returning home or improving her life.

Each morning, she sends her tiny children to the rubbish tip to scavenge for anything they can sell to buy food.

I want to hear the other side of the story. Muslim communities have long claimed Christians rustle their cattle and attack their villages. The Christians say these attacks are only ever reprisals for Muslim violence.

Back in Jos, we drive through narrow streets filled with hawkers aggressively peddling their wares: for a while, a man sprints alongside our car brandishing a dead chicken.

I meet Sheikh Sani Yahaya Jingir, chairman of a national Salafi (the strict, orthodox branch of Sunni Islam) organisation. The community here, he tells me, faces discrimination at every level: especially politically.

‘We are the majority in Plateau,’ he says. ‘Yet we have never had a Muslim governor. We have no voice.’ He speaks of earlier crises – going all the way back to 1960 – and of repeated attacks where hundreds of Muslims were killed, mosques burned and markets destroyed.

‘What surprises us,’ he says, ‘is that America and Britain talk about “human rights”. But when Muslims are killed, they are silent.’

He leans forward. Boko Haram, the Nigerian jihadist group, he tells me, is no mere home-grown insurgency. ‘There are people who say America and Israel created Boko Haram to destabilise Nigeria.’ He offers no evidence. But it’s clear that he, and his followers in the room, believe it sincerely.

When I raise the killings of Christians in Plateau, he doesn’t deny them. He simply insists the story is not one-sided. He recounts an alleged attack on Eid prayers in 2011, claiming worshippers were killed and cars burned. He barely escaped with his life. ‘We chose the law,’ he says. ‘We did not retaliate.’

Both sides believe they are the victims. Neither is inclined to yield.

As we drive away from this troubled region for the last time, I find myself thinking about something that happened the previous day in Jos’s city centre.

We had paused at a traffic light. On the pavement nearby, a small boy clutching a battered toy stared at me through the car window and followed my gaze to the church across the intersection. Then, he slowly lifted his fingers and, smiling, made the sign of the cross.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-15558203/Churches-fields-families-Nigerian-Christians-jihadists-frontlines.html

Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by whytediamond(m): 7:22pm On Feb 15
Na God hand Nigerians dey
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by strangest(m): 7:23pm On Feb 15
Please God take this country away from one Sheik Gumi and others....


Imagine Sheik Gumi traveled to Turkey and was posting a church converted to Mosque...

That man is really evil
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by BlocksNG(m): 7:23pm On Feb 15
FreeStuffsNG, yarimo, WriterNG, God1000, madridguy, helinues, CoronaVirus, WriterNiG. Propaganda failed, asiri ti tu.
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by ZombieTAMER: 7:23pm On Feb 15
undecided

Guess what the president of the country who's seeking reelection is doing

he's very busy watching fish festival

what a failure

Over 100 in boko haram den, Tinubu has the temerity to seek reelection..
this shameless failure was at the forefront protesting during Jonathan tenure,
we have never had it this bad as a Nation

Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by Ameboperoo(m): 7:23pm On Feb 15
Hmm. Things are happening in this country and everybody just de as if everything is normal.
How long are we going to continue like this? May God help us in this country
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by AZControversial: 7:23pm On Feb 15
undecided

And all that matters to Tinubu is re-election.....
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by Saturnalia(m): 7:24pm On Feb 15
The war in Plateau is a war of conquest ignited by the blood-letting Fulani Jihadists and their apologists, who are bent on installing an Emir in a Christian dominated State.
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by jmoore(m): 7:25pm On Feb 15
Tinubu wasting billions of our money on propaganda lobby.
Many documentaries will keep revealing christian genocide.
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by jFrankNorfleet: 7:25pm On Feb 15
And where was God when all these were happening?

Perhaps no show as usual
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by sweetkev(m): 7:25pm On Feb 15
Terrorists attacking Christians has now become a normal thing in naija. Next news please.
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by Darekiki: 7:25pm On Feb 15
Don't worry MOHAMMAD PETERU OBI Will help us fight insecurity.
He read insecurity in university.
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by ZombieTAMER: 7:26pm On Feb 15
Ameboperoo:
Hmm. May God help us in this country
God left this country a long time ago
Only we can help ourselves

We need leaders that feel the pain of the masses.. not Tinubu who's only interested in taxes
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by Hmmmmm2024: 7:26pm On Feb 15
BlocksNG:
FreeStuffsNG, yarimo, WriterNG, God1000, madridguy, helinues, CoronaVirus, WriterNiG. Propaganda failed, asiri ti tu.
how many Christains have attacked mosques ?
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by sagitariusbaby(m): 7:26pm On Feb 15
When is all these going to end? What will Muslims make of the world if they are left to live in it alone? That religion is not compactable with 21 century scientific driven world.
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by Kingson28: 7:27pm On Feb 15
Islam is a CURSE and a PLAGUE to Nigeria.
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by ZombieTAMER: 7:28pm On Feb 15
sweetkev:
Terrorists attacking Christians has now become a normal thing in naija. Next news please.
This is the product of Muslim Muslim tickets..
it empowers and boldens terrorists..
with the pronouncements by the so called first lady that Muslims are larger in number.
I'm sure she's talking about the South West where she's from..

you can guess what that can do to their moral
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by kakaG: 7:28pm On Feb 15
The problem of this country is more than the capacity of an individual. It needs to be a consensus amongst the government ( so to say) and all other Nigerians to start a new Nigeria and end the old corrupt one. Many leaders we hoped will drive this move have sadly failed to prevail on this account.

2027 isn't going to be different. What will actually make the difference is the rise of a new generation that will say....we've had enough.
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by Mrchippychappy(m): 7:28pm On Feb 15
The new narrative by some Fulani on social media is that they are the victims. I can't believe how every other Nigerian allowed it get this bad.
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by PlasmaTV: 7:28pm On Feb 15
Tinubu is a capital failure.
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by Benlight:
Years ago people said “They cannot attack cities only villages and the Northeast”, yet they are now in several states and in Niger state very close to the Federal capital.
They cannot attack southwest, they have done so
Now is, “ they cannot attack Lagos” I laugh in Arabic.
One lie also is always claiming to be majority in Nigeria and in some states. That is a lie.
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by Love800(m): 7:32pm On Feb 15
With president obi, we will conquer Nigeria.
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by SMerchant: 7:33pm On Feb 15
Yet that devil incarnate Remi was busy talking nonsense just because of her satanic husband bola
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by IkeOnyia: 7:35pm On Feb 15
What a horrific report of the suffering of Nigerian Christians. If President Trump had not raised this issue, Tinubu and his federal government would have continued to sweep it under the carpet just like his predecessors since 1999. So until the majority indigenous Christian population of Plateau state especially those in Riyom, Barkin Ladi, Jos South, Mangu and Bokkos are resettled in their ancestral lands, after driving away the Islamist Fulani occupiers, then the Federal government led by Tinubu is a full participant in the ongoing genocide against Christians in Nigeria.
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by IronCondemned: 7:42pm On Feb 15
See how a foreigner is telling our own story undiluted the way it should be.

This is terrorism. This is genocide against Christians by Jihadists, yet the government downplay it and call it farmer/harder conflict instead of terrorism by Fulani Jihadists and Gumi sponsored exterminators.
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by AreaFada2: 7:44pm On Feb 15
Ameboperoo:
Hmm. Things are happening in this country and everybody just de as if everything is normal.
How long are we going to continue like this? May God help us in this country
That's what you see where people have no sense of national identity.

Nobody asked anybody if they wanted to be part of 9ja.

They forced a cow to the stream, but drinking is where the wahala is now.

Except those with oil wells, monopoly and feeding fat on 9ja's wealth, 9ja remains just a name. A geographical expression like Pa Awo once said.

If 9ja stopped to exist today, so long people have their Efik, Edo, Tiv, Berom, Kanuri, Hausa, Yoruba, Igbo, Izon, Gbagyi and whatever their tribal and religious identity intact, no qualms.
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by simfrost90210: 7:44pm On Feb 15
Wonders shall never start to end in Nigeria!
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by ndukwejoe(m): 7:50pm On Feb 15
This report is from a screwdriver salesman
Re: "They Roasted The Pastor & His Wife Alive In Plateau Church" - Daily Mail by IkeOnyia: 7:51pm On Feb 15
The Fulani islamists who have been carrying out this wicked act of genocide must also be brought to justice. President Trump must demand this from Tinubu and if Tinubu fails to deliver, then he is an accessory to this ongoing genocide and President Trump can give him the Maduro treatment. God save Nigerian Christians especially those in the North of the country.
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