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Nigeria’s minister, ex-Canadian lawmaker clash over alleged Christian genocide

Nigeria’s Foreign Affairs Minister, Yusuf Tuggar, on Tuesday clashed with former Canadian lawmaker Goldie Ghamari over allegations of large-scale persecution of Christians in Nigeria.

Tuggar, on Piers Morgan’s programme, rebutted the claims, challenging the statistics and explaining the country’s broader security complexities.

In the opening segment, Morgan cited numbers from the International Society for Civil Liberties and Rule of Law (Intersociety), alleging that more than 50,000 Christians have been killed in Nigeria since 2009 and 18,000 churches destroyed.

The minister, however, described the figures as misleading, arguing that the government does not categorise fatalities by religious identity and that all victims are treated as Nigerians.

News report stated that when the host pressed him for official data, the minister said only 177 Christians had been killed and 102 churches attacked in the past five years.

Tension reportedly escalated when Morgan invited Ghamari into the discussion.

According to Ghamari, Nigeria’s security crisis amounts to jihad, even linking it to the October 7, 2023, Hamas assault on Israel.

The former Canadian politician also referenced the Muslim identities of President Bola Tinubu and Vice-President Kashim Shettima as “evidence” of an enabling Islamist government.

“By the way, this is a government that is working closely behind the scenes with the Islamic Republic of Iran. You should ask the foreign minister why Nigerian schoolchildren are holding pictures of the Ayatollah, who is a brutal dictator and is murdering my people in Iran,” she alleged.

Ghamari further insisted that people need to look into the linkages between the current Nigerian government and the Islamic Republic of Iran.

“I was a politician for seven years, Piers, and I can tell when someone is lying and avoiding the truth. That’s exactly what this foreign minister is doing, and shame on him for lying,” she added.

Meanwhile, Tuggar fired back, calling her remarks uninformed and dismissing her assertions as hollow rhetoric. He accused the ex-MP of trivialising the lives of Nigerians from afar.

Responding to her claims about Tinubu and Shettima’s religion, the minister noted that Nigerians prioritise geopolitical balance over faith, pointing out that the president is from the south while the vice-president is from the north.

When Morgan asked if he condemned attacks on Christians by Islamist extremists, Tuggar said he did — and shared a personal tragedy:

“I lost my father-in-law to an attack by an Islamic terrorist group, Boko Haram, so I myself am a victim. I’ve lost family members to attacks, and they were Muslims.

“But it doesn’t matter whether they’re Muslim or Christian… The number one enemy of Boko Haram is not a Christian. It is a Muslim who does not subscribe to their own brand of Islam,” he said.

 

 


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