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Legalbrief   |   your legal news hub Sunday 12 April 2026

Easter worshippers rescued after deadly church attack

The Nigerian military said yesterday (Sunday) it had rescued 31 worshippers seized from Easter celebrations in northwestern Kaduna state, though at least five others were killed, as the country's security comes increasingly under international scrutiny, reports France24. Gunmen raided a Catholic and an evangelical church, the Christian Association of Nigeria chairman for Kaduna state Caleb Bawa Ma'aji told AFP. The kidnapping at a village located around 100 kilometres (62 miles) north of the capital, Abuja, occurred despite the police chief ordering a ‘massive security deployment’ including at places of worship during the Easter festival.The troops engaged the attackers in a ‘firefight’, forcing the ‘terrorists to abandon 31 hostages’, the military said. It said five victims had been killed by the attackers, but said Ma'aji, seven people were killed during the attack. In January, bandits rounded up more than 170 worshippers from three churches during mass in Kaduna. Authorities said 80 escaped and the rest were released following negotiations after three weeks in custody. Kaduna is one of several states in northwest and central Nigeria that have for years been terrorised by criminal gangs called bandits that carry out deadly raids on communities and kidnap for ransom. Despite the bandits being motivated by financial gains, they are increasingly collaborating with jihadists from the northeast. It was unclear if the military's use of ‘terrorists’ was referring to jihadists or bandits. While the army has been beefing up its deployment to the region to combat the groups, Nigeria has continued to see a rise in violence. That has drawn the attention of US President Donald Trump, who has alleged there is a ‘genocide’ of Christians in Nigeria.