The United States House of Representatives Subcommittee on Africa will on Thursday, November 20, 2025, hold a high-profile open hearing to examine President Donald Trump’s recent redesignation of Nigeria as a Country of Particular Concern (CPC) over alleged religious freedom violations.
If upheld by the US Senate, the CPC label empowers Washington to impose targeted sanctions on Nigerian officials implicated in religious persecution and restrict some forms of bilateral assistance. The designation also sends a warning to the international community that religious freedom in Nigeria is “under serious threat.”
The hearing, billed for 11:00 a.m. in Room 2172 of the Rayburn House Office Building and streamed live, will be chaired by Rep. Chris Smith (R-NJ). It will feature two panels comprising senior State Department officials and prominent Nigerian religious leaders.
An invitation to members of the House Foreign Affairs Committee requested their attendance at what is expected to be a consequential review of Nigeria’s security and human rights situation.
Among the first panel of witnesses are Jonathan Pratt, Senior Bureau Official at the Bureau of African Affairs, and Jacob McGee, Deputy Assistant Secretary in the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor.
The second panel features the Director of the Centre for Religious Freedom, Ms. Nina Shea; Bishop Wilfred Anagbe of the Makurdi Catholic Diocese; and Ms. Oge Onubogu of the Centre for Strategic & International Studies.
The hearing will explore the scale of religious persecution in Nigeria, assess US policy options, and consider measures such as sanctions, humanitarian support, and deeper cooperation with Nigeria to prevent further violence.
President Trump redesignated Nigeria a Country of Particular Concern on October 31, 2025, citing what he described as severe and escalating attacks on Christians by extremist groups.
“There is an existential threat to Christianity in Nigeria,” he said, warning that the US could take drastic action—including halting all aid or even launching military operations—if Nigeria fails to curb alleged killings of Christians.
In a statement on his X handle, President Bola Tinubu rejected Trump’s claims as a “misrepresentation” of Nigeria’s religious landscape.
“Nigeria stands firmly as a democracy governed by constitutional guarantees of religious liberty,” he said. “Religious freedom and tolerance have always been core to our national identity.”
Nigeria was first placed on the CPC list by Trump in 2020 but removed by President Joe Biden after taking office.
Bishop Anagbe Raises Alarm In UK Parliament
One of Thursday’s key witnesses, Bishop Wilfred Anagbe, has been vocal about attacks on Christian communities. Speaking in the UK Parliament on March 25, 2025, he described how Islamist extremists and militant Fulani herdsmen had ravaged communities in Benue State—burning homes, displacing families, and killing clergy and laity.
“They bear down on defenceless villagers without consequence,” he told parliamentarians. “They attack even those who escape into IDP camps.”
US Lawmakers Clash with Tinubu Administration
In a recent Fox News interview, Rep. Riley Moore (R-WV) insisted that the violence in Nigeria is severe and “five times more Christians are being killed than people of other faiths.”
Moore dismissed Tinubu’s pushback as “completely false,” claiming evidence of blasphemy laws and death-penalty cases linked to religious disputes.
He said the US has a duty to intervene because it is “a Christian nation that stands up for the persecuted,” adding that all options—including sanctions and even “kinetic military action”—remain on the table.
Another US lawmaker, Rep. Bill Huizenga, told Arise TV last week that Trump’s threats of military intervention were unlikely, but said the President is committed to ending what he views as genocide against Christians.
He argued that economic sanctions could help cut off funding to extremist groups such as Boko Haram and violent Fulani factions.
Pope Leo XIV Adds His Voice
Pope Leo XIV has also expressed concern about rising religious violence in Nigeria.
In a post on his verified X handle, the Pontiff lamented that Christians were facing discrimination and attacks in countries including Nigeria, Mozambique, Sudan, and Bangladesh.
“In various parts of the world, Christians suffer discrimination and persecution,” he wrote, praying for peace and inter-religious harmony.
FG Moves To Ease Tensions In Plateau
Back home, President Tinubu has deployed a peace emissary, Dr Abiodun Essiet, to Plateau State in a bid to calm tensions and rebuild trust among warring communities.
Essiet, Tinubu’s Senior Special Assistant on Community Engagement (North Central), met with religious leaders, Fulani community heads, youth groups, and Christian clerics during her visit.
Her intervention reportedly helped resolve a conflict involving herdsmen and a farmland owner in Jos South, leading to a peace agreement and compensation payment supervised by local leaders.
According to a statement by presidential aide Bayo Onanuga, the President remains committed to promoting peaceful coexistence and strengthening grassroots dialogue structures across the North Central region.
WARNING: If You Are Not 18+, Don’t Click The Link Below 👇🫣
https://massivemanuscriptestimated.com/kx6iepv2qm?key=6c14bd1d68e1eba721851f19778f5efe
Please don’t forget to “Allow the notification” so you will be the first to get our gist when we publish it.
Drop your comment in the section below, and don’t forget to share the post.
Never Miss A Single News Or Gist, Kindly Join Us On WhatsApp Channel:
https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Vad8g81Eawdsio6INn3B
Telegram Channel:
https://t.me/gistsmateNG