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First at Fox – The White House, facing an ongoing tsunami of murder attacks by ISIS and IS allies on Christians in sub-Saharan Africa, is working closely with the State Department to find ways to stop murder.
Last week, the White House told Fox News numbers that “the Trump administration condemns this horrible act of violence against Christians with the strongest attitude.” Democratic Republic of Congo (Democratic Republic of the Congo), while Catholic worshippers are praying for peace. Authorities say the killer is an Islamic militant from the Allied Democratic Forces, also known as the Islamic State Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Last month, in neighboring Nigeria, 27 Christians were reportedly killed by Islamic Fulani tribes, and in the village of Bindi Ta-Hoss, residents were mainly Christians. “I advised my family to seek asylum in the church, which seemed to be the safest place at the time. I lost my wife and second daughter in the attack; they were burned (alive) by the Fulani militia.”

Villagers buried their deaths after murdering 49 Christians by ISIS-linked jihadists in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. (Open the door)
D’Oung Mangut, a local youth leader who helped retrieve the body, added: “People were killed like chickens and did nothing.”
“This grim lawsuit has become commonplace in central Nigeria,” John Eibner, president of Christian human rights group International, told Fox News numbers. “This is a long-standing process of violent Islamization, a purge of ethnic religions. Last Palm Sunday, 50 Christians were massacred in nearby Bassa. In the past four months, only 165 Christians have been killed in the Plateau State, one of Nigeria’s provinces.”
“The kind of massacres that occur in central Nigeria are also happening in Christian places like Congo and Mozambique. There is no simple solution.”
ISIS soldiers behead Christians, burn churches and houses in Mozambique: “Silent Genocide”
British Open Door Master, a global Christian charity that supports and expresses persecution for Christians to persecute their faith, told Fox News numbers: “The crisis facing large swaths of sub-Saharan Africa is hard to exaggerate. This is possible for the future peace and stability of several countries in the region.”

Coffin of victims killed by Islamists in Bindi, Nigeria. (Christian Solidarity International (CSI))
“Around 150,000 people have been killed in jihadist groups over the past decade. More than 16 million Christians have been expelled from the area’s houses and land.”
Trump administration It seems to be preparing to take action. This week, a State Department spokesman told Fox News digital numbers, “The State Department is working closely with the White House to identify opportunities to further promote the cause of religious freedom around the world.”
The spokesman added: “Religious freedom for all people around the world is a necessary condition for morality and national security and a priority for U.S. foreign policy. As President Trump said, the United States will vigorously promote this freedom.”
Nigeria is one of the most dangerous places in the world. Recent open door research shows that more Christians were killed due to their faith in Nigeria than the rest of the world combined. Local Bishop Wilfred Anagbe is under threat, with about 20 parishioners killed after opposing the killing of a Congressional Commission in March.

Photos of members of Boko Haram, an Islamic extremist group in Nigeria, October 31, 2014. (AP)
This week, the Bishop specifically spoke with Fox News digital numbers, declaring that “the attackers constituted a larger family of Islamic jihadists, led by Nigeria. Boko HaramISIS West Africa and similar groups. Nigeria has a long history of Islamic fundamentalism. (But) violence, killing and displacement without consequences propose a new model that Islamists resort to using their control over official governments and institutions to continue this jihad.
“Nigeria’s fundamentalist Muslims tend to transform entire or part of Nigeria (IN) into ISIS.”
Pope condemns the latest massacre of Christians by Islamic militants in Nigeria
David Onillokwu Idah, director of the International Human Rights Commission, told the Open Door: “This is what the Nazis did to the Jews.”
John Samuel, a legal expert who opens the door, told Fox News Digital that if Christians gather in a “prayer meeting, say or go to church), Islamic groups are operating, which could be a one-way ticket, or something very deadly.”
“If you are one Christianityyou either convert to Islam or die. ”

On March 1, 2020, believers held signs as they marched on the streets of Abuja while praying and penising in Nigeria. (Photography by Kola Sulaimon/AFP via Gettty Images)
Samuel cited the example of a Nigerian Christian who was ambushed by a Boko Haram fighter. According to his widow, “He was asked to deny his faith, saying Islamic prayers. He refused and was killed immediately.
Throughout the region, Islamic attackers allegedly hope to belong to the Christian land they attacked. Lawyer Jabez Musa fights in court in Nigeria to retrieve the land. He told Fox News Digital Digital Displaced Christians “want their land to restore to their livelihoods. Fulani militants. ”
“Only Christians are the target, they are killed, displaced, and their land is taken over.”
British Open Gate and Ireland CEO Henrietta Blyth told Fox News Digital: “The African government must provide three things urgently: Justice – Justice – because few of these criminals have to consider, and this selfless attitude will burrow them. Restore their lives – People want their lives to be restored, an opportunity to rebuild their homes, put their children in trouble, send their offenses to them, and protect their lives. The barracks and deploy around the most vulnerable.

The funerals of about 27 Christians were reportedly killed by the Islamist Fulani tribe in the village of Bindi Ta-Hoss, Nigeria. (Pretty: Christian Solidarity International (CSI))
“For a long time, no one has talked about the horrible wholesale massacre of Christians and moderate Muslims in Africa. The Western world needs to wake up and feel angry,” she said.
“We are tired of condolences and statements. What we need is true security, not sympathy,” a grieving relative told reporters after the massacre of Bindi Ta-Hoss in Nigeria last month.
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Fox News Digital contacted the governments of Nigeria and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, but received no response.
Attorney Jabez Musa pleaded: “I urge the U.S. government, especially President Trump himself… to come to the help of Christians.”