x

U.S. gives reasons for blacklisting Nigeria for Religious Freedom violations

The United States has given reasons why it placed Nigeria for the first time on a religious freedom blacklist.

US Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, had on Monday designated Nigeria as a “Country of Particular Concern” for religious freedom, the rare inclusion of a fellow democracy in the US effort to shame nations into action.

“Today the US designates Burma, China, Eritrea, Iran, Nigeria, the DPRK, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Tajikistan, and Turkmenistan as countries of concern under the International Religious Freedom Act of 1998 for engaging systematic, ongoing, egregious religious freedom violations,” Pompeo announced on Twitter.

READ ALSO: How Perm Sec bought Microphones with N52.6 Million with Delta state funds

The Nigerian government, however, rejected the tag, arguing that it “protects religious freedom”.

“Nigeria does not engage in religious freedom violation; neither does it have a policy of religious persecution. Victims of insecurity and terrorism in the country are adherents of Christianity, Islam and other religions,” Lai Mohammed, Minister of Information and Culture said.

Samuel Brownback, US Ambassador-at-large for International Religious Freedom, in a press statement on Thursday, accused the Nigerian government of tolerating religious violence.

He said: “The secretary and the world have great concern about what’s taking place in Nigeria at this time, and some terrorist groups are organising and pushing into the country.

“We’re seeing a lot of religious-tinged violence taking place in that country and indeed in West Africa. It’s an area of growing concern about what’s happening, in particular the tension that’s taking place there between religious groups. And it’s often the religious affiliation that is used to try to recruit and inspire violent acts.

“You’ve got expanded terrorist activities, you’ve got a lot of it associated around religious affiliations, and the government’s response has been minimal to not happening at all.

“Several cases – there have not been criminal cases brought forward by the government. Terrorism continues to happen and grow, in some places, unabated.”

Hot this week

IPOB condemns heavy security deployment at Onitsha Main Market

The Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) has criticised the...

Kano Commissioner Urges Deputy Governor to Resign After APC Defection

The Kano State Commissioner for Information and Internal Affairs,...

Probe uncovers Colonel as alleged coordinator of coup plot against Tinubu

An interim investigation report into the alleged coup plot...

Nigeria to Host 2026 Africa Research Conference via NIPRD, SPARK Collaboration

By Joyce Remi-BabayejuNigeria is set to host the 2026...

Sudden Death at Abuja Mosque Raises Cardiac Arrest Concerns

By Sam AgogoShock and grief gripped worshippers in Abuja...

Airports, Drug Syndicates, and Nigeria’s Global Reputation

By Tahir WaliNigeria’s airports are more than transit points;...

Kogi Govt Says Cash-Back Promotion Policy Boosts Workers’ Welfare

By Noah Ocheni, LokojaThe Kogi State Government says its...

Bayelsa Lays Late Deputy Governor to Rest as Tinubu, Jonathan Pay Tributes

By Amgbare Ekaunkumo, YenagoaBayelsa State on Saturday laid to...

Humanitarian:President Shettima Commissions Tudun Biri Resettlement Site in Kaduna

By Joyce Remi-BabayejuThe Vice President, Senator Kashim Shettima, has...

Army kills ISWAP commander, foils attacks in Borno

Troops of the Joint Task Force (North East), Operation...

Premier League Clubs Step Up Activity as January Transfer Window Nears Close

Premier League clubs intensified squad reshaping during the January...

March 31 Deadline: Oyedele Urges Nigerians to File Annual Tax Returns

Chairman of the Presidential Committee on Fiscal Policy and...

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img