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The Be Heard Project is a voice for the persecuted Church. Through law, public policy, and grassroots action, we amplify your voice to demand that world governments respect the most basic human rights and human dignity of persecuted believers. Join with us today and Be Heard.

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Confronting Religious Persecution at the IRF Summit

Feb. 10Stories That Demand Action:

Last week I spoke on a panel at the International Religious Freedom (IRF) Summit in Washington, D.C.—a global gathering that brings together advocates, policymakers, and legal experts from around the world who are on the front lines of defending religious freedom. The Summit provides a rare forum to share firsthand experiences, expose ongoing...More

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Feb. 02Marked for Death: Why Somalia Is...

The Fate of the Kurds Is Critical to Syria’s Future

Jan. 30The Fate of the Kurds Is Critical...

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Save Christians From Murder in Congo

Save Christians From Murder in...

The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has once again become the site of unspeakable violence , with Christian communities being targeted by terrorists and militant forces. On February 15, over 70 Christians – primarily women, children, and the elderly – were added to the list of victims when they were abducted...More

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Free the Israeli Hostages from Hamas

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Nigerian Christians

Horror in Africa: ACLJ Delivers Critical Universal Periodic Review to UN as Deadly Violence Against Christians Spreads Across Africa

Jordan Sekulow

November 25th, 2020

We’ve been warning the world for years that the deadly violence against Christians in Nigeria is going to spread like wildfire across the entire continent of Africa if it is not put out quickly.

Now reports show that violence against Christians is burning far beyond Nigeria’s borders.

Recently, we told you how more than 1,200 Nigerian Christians had already been slaughtered by radical Islamic groups such as Boko Haram in just the first six months of 2020. That’s more than were reportedly killed in all of 2019.

Just days ago, Boko Haram reportedly carried out another deadly attack in Nigeria, brutally executing 12 Christians, including a pastor, and kidnapped women and children:

Islamic extremists believed to be affiliated with Boko Haram reportedly killed several Christians, including a pastor, and kidnapped several others in an attack carried out in Nigeria’s conflict-ridden northeast earlier this week. According to [t]he Associated Press, the insurgents killed at least 12 people in the attack on the Takulashi village near Chibok in Borno state on Sunday morning. The militants are also said to have abducted nine women and young girls.

Gut-wrenching accounts like this are coming out of Nigeria with alarming regularity now. It almost feels weekly at this point, and the year’s still not over.

As one Nigerian Christian reportedly said:

“I’m scared. These killings and abductions are so much and, on the increase, even in communities you thought were safe and could not be penetrated have been attacked.”

If nothing is done, the bloodshed will continue to spread into every part of Nigeria, and Africa. Undeterred, evil will always find a way.

The ACLJ has gone directly to the U.N. Human Rights Council to defend Nigeria’s dying Christians. We’ve delivered multiple critical written submissions and oral interventions through our European affiliate, the European Centre for Law and Justice (ECLJ), urging intervention to save Nigeria’s endangered Christians.

And now reports of bloodshed and violence against Christians are popping up from other regions of the African continent. The settings are different, but the details are disturbingly similar.

A week before that horrific attack in Nigeria, at least 18 Christians were reportedly killed and Christian homes and a church were burned to the ground in the Democratic Republic of Congo by suspected Islamic radicals.

In Uganda, a Christian pastor and father of 8 children was set-up and fatally ambushed by Islamic extremists because he dared to preach the Gospel on a local radio program. According to reports:

A Christian pastor was reportedly killed in northern Uganda at the end of October after he compared Christianity and Islam during his radio broadcast.

Pastor David Omara, the father of eight and pastor of Christian Church Center, was beaten and strangled around 9 p.m. on Oct. 31 after finishing a broadcast in the town of Aduku, according to his son, Simon Okut.

And in a recent report straight out of a nightmare, Islamic terrorists beheaded over 50 innocent Christians during a mass execution on a soccer field in Mozambique.

ISIS-linked terrorists beheaded and dismembered more than 50 people over three days at a soccer field in Mozambique, according to local reports.

According to reports, the vicious perpetrators are attempting to form a new Islamic state. This cannot be allowed. Action must be taken to stop this deadly violence and prevent terror from spreading further.

We just filed a critical Universal Periodic Review (UPR) to the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) through the ECLJ regarding the deadly violence afflicting Christians in Mozambique.

Our submission highlighted the unfathomable acts of evil – including murder, rape, and human trafficking – being perpetrated against Mozambique’s innocent Christian population:

Christians are being attacked in northern Mozambique, by Islamic extremists, resulting in thousands of citizens becoming displaced. It is estimated that since 2017, approximately 1,500 people have been killed and 21,000 displaced as a result of attacks by Islamic extremists.

These attacks predominately target Christians and their places of worship. In addition, in the southern region of Mozambique, vulnerable young women are prey to human traffickers who then exploit them sexually.

Men and young boys are also targeted by human traffickers who traffic them from Mozambique to South Africa to be used as forced labour . . . . Furthermore, albino children are targeted by human traffickers for their organs and body parts.

We pointed out that such disgusting acts violate not only Mozambique’s own constitution but the anti-trafficking law that was passed in 2008.

Our submission urged international intervention to stop this terrible violence and abuse and to put pressure on Mozambique to do more to protect its Christians and hold terrorists accountable:

Mozambique must do more to protect its citizens from being attacked by Islamic extremists. The savage attacks on Christians and others in the north (or wherever they occur) must be condemned and the perpetrators must be arrested and held accountable for their crimes.

A strong message must be sent that terrorism will not be tolerated.

The ACLJ will continue to fight tirelessly to defend our Christian brothers and sisters in Nigeria, Mozambique, and all across Africa and see the barbaric terrorists brought to justice.  Stand with us.

In addition to Mozambique, we also recently submitted UPRs for the African nations of Somalia, Niger, Namibia, and Sierra Leone.

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Jordan Sekulow  //

Dec 29, 2025

On Christmas Day, President Trump ordered U.S. military strikes against the Islamic State-linked terrorist camps in northwest Nigeria, targeting extremists responsible for mass killings and terror attacks –

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Reverend Ezekiel Dachomo: The Man Facing Down Genocide in Nigeria

Keith Mauck  //

Dec 22, 2025

The video is stark – rows of dead bodies laid out on the ground; grief etched onto every mourner’s face. Then a pastor breaks the silence with words no minister should ever have to say : “I am tired of burying...

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New Congressional Resolution Condemning the Slaughter of Christians...

Jordan Sekulow  //

Nov 07, 2025

After years of sounding the alarm here at the ACLJ , there is real momentum in Washington, D.C., to stop the murder of Christians in Nigeria. Just days ago, President Donald Trump issued a powerful Truth...

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American Center for Law and Justice | Washington D.C. | Copyright © 2026, ACLJ | Privacy & Security Policy | Annual Report

Be Heard Project is a project of the American Center for Law and Justice. American Center for Law and Justice is a d/b/a for Christian Advocates Serving Evangelism, Inc., a tax-exempt, not-for-profit, religious corporation as defined under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, specifically dedicated to the ideal that religious freedom and freedom of speech are inalienable, God-given rights. The Center's purpose is to engage legal, legislative and cultural issues by implementing an effective strategy of advocacy, education and litigation to ensure that those rights are protected under the law. The organization has participated in numerous cases before the Supreme Court, Federal Court of Appeals, Federal District Courts, and various state courts regarding freedom of religion and freedom of speech. Your gift is very much appreciated and fully deductible as a charitable contribution. A copy of our latest financial report may be obtained by writing to us at P.O. Box 90555, Washington, DC 20090-0555.