BREAKING USA BOMBS NIGERIA _ DEFENDING THE PERSECUTED

 

SILENCE IS COMPLICITY. DEFENDING PERSECUTED CHRISTIANS IS NOT AGGRESSION — IT IS JUSTICE.

BREAKING USA BOMBS NIGERIA _DEFENDING THE PERSECUTED
BREAKING USA BOMBS NIGERIA _
DEFENDING THE PERSECUTED

Why Confronting the Genocide of Christians in Northern Nigeria Is a Moral, Legal, and Civilizational Obligation

For decades, Christians in Northern Nigeria have been subjected to systematic, unrelenting, and ideologically driven violence—churches incinerated, ancestral villages obliterated, clergy assassinated, families uprooted and scattered.

These atrocities, perpetrated by jihadist entities such as Boko Haram and ISWAP, are not sporadic skirmishes nor accidental by-products of instability.

They exhibit the defining features of ethno-religious cleansing, exhaustively documented by international observers and anticipated by years of unheeded warnings from human-rights advocates.

Yet amid this carnage, the Nigerian state postures confidently on the global stage, invoking sovereignty, regional dominance, and military readiness—while persistently failing to discharge the most elemental duty of governance: the preservation of innocent life.

A state that trumpets authority yet cannot secure its churches, farms, schools, and villages has mistaken bravado for legitimacy. Sovereignty is not a rhetorical ornament; it is a moral trust. And that trust has been repeatedly breached.

In such circumstances, global silence is not prudence—it is moral abdication.

International Law and the Imperative to Protect

International human-rights law speaks with rare clarity on this matter:
Article 3 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) enshrines the inalienable right to life, liberty, and personal security.

Article 18 safeguards freedom of conscience and religion, including the right to worship without intimidation or fear.

The Genocide Convention of 1948 imposes a binding obligation upon states—and the international community—to prevent and punish acts intended to destroy a religious group, in whole or in part.

The Responsibility to Protect (R2P) doctrine affirms that when a state is demonstrably unwilling or incapable of shielding its population from mass atrocities, the obligation to act does not dissolve—it devolves.

When alerts are sounded for years, when mass graves accumulate, and when official assurances substitute for decisive action, the ethical burden unmistakably shifts.

Defensive intervention to halt mass slaughter is not belligerence; it is the execution of justice and the vindication of human dignity.

No government may brandish sovereignty as a shield while neglecting sovereignty’s primary obligation.

Christian Theology and the Moral Logic of Just Defense

Christian faith neither idolizes violence nor canonizes passivity in the face of extermination.

Scripture persistently commands the protection of the defenseless:
“Rescue the weak and the needy; deliver them from the hand of the wicked.” (Psalm 82:4)

“Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves.” (Proverbs 31:8–9)
“Greater love has no one than this: to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.” (John 15:13)

From Augustine to Aquinas, historic Christian thought articulated the Just War tradition, permitting the use of force only under stringent moral constraints: a just cause, right intention, proportional means, and the inviolable protection of non-combatants.

Neutralizing jihadist terror that deliberately targets civilians, worshippers, schools, and livelihoods satisfies these criteria when undertaken to preserve life and restore peace, not to conquer territory or demonize a faith.

The Biblical Indictment of Indifference
Scripture reserves some of its sternest rebukes not for aggressors alone, but for bystanders.

The prophet Obadiah condemns Edom for detached indifference while Israel was assaulted:
“On the day you stood aloof… you were like one of them.” (Obadiah 1:11)

Moral neutrality in the presence of mass violence is itself a form of participation. To observe, to issue statements, and to abstain from meaningful action is to incur shared culpability.

Global Hypocrisy and the Bankruptcy of Diplomacy Alone

Several global powers—China, Russia, Iran, Turkey, and assorted ideological blocs—are swift to invoke Nigerian “sovereignty” in international forums.

Yet none exhibit the resolve to intervene meaningfully to arrest the bloodshed. Their engagement seldom progresses beyond communiqués and ceremonial concern.

Rhetoric does not disarm terrorists.
Diplomatic condolences do not resurrect massacred communities.
This is not an indictment of ordinary Muslims, many of whom are themselves casualties of extremist violence. It is a confrontation with jihadist ideology, which instrumentalizes religion to legitimize slaughter.

Islamic terrorism remains a transnational scourge, devastating Christians, Muslims, and minorities alike—from Nigeria to the Levant, from Mesopotamia to Europe.

Leadership, Courage, and Moral Clarity
History does not commemorate nations for the eloquence of their declarations, but for the moral seriousness of their actions.

True leadership is revealed when power is marshaled to defend the innocent and restrain the violent.
Any intervention must be governed by discipline, intelligence, and accountability. Civilian life is sacred. Precision, proportionality, and the safeguarding of non-combatants are not tactical preferences—they are ethical imperatives.

A Final Appeal

This is not a summons to religious conflict. It is a summons to moral responsibility.
To defend the persecuted is not bigotry; it is fidelity to justice.
To restrain aggressors is not oppression; it is protection.

To act decisively when others merely deliberate is not tyranny; it is leadership.
“Learn to do right; seek justice. Defend the oppressed.” (Isaiah 1:17)

When innocent blood cries out from the ground, heaven does not remain indifferent—and neither should the conscience of the world

Rev. Emmanuel Boachie, PRESIDENT, Centre for Biblical-Historical Christianity Defence.

Other stories

Leave a Reply