Renowned American comedian and television host Bill Maher has sparked widespread debate after slamming global media silence on the systematic killing of Christians in Nigeria, calling it a far deadlier “genocide attempt” than the conflict in Gaza.
In a recent episode of his HBO show Real Time with Bill Maher, the outspoken atheist declared: “If you don’t know what’s going on in Nigeria, your media sources suck, you are in a bubble. I am not a Christian. They are systematically killing Christians in Nigeria. They have killed over 100,000 Christians since 2009, they have burned 18,000 churches. These are the Islamists, Boko Haram. This is so much more of a genocide attempt than what’s going on in Gaza. They are literally trying to wipe out the Christian population in Nigeria. Where are the kids protesting this?”
Maher’s comments, which quickly went viral on social media platforms including Nairaland and X, have drawn attention to what many rights groups describe as one of the world’s most under-reported religious persecutions.
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Data compiled by the Nigerian-based International Society for Civil Liberties and the Rule of Law (Intersociety) backs the scale of the crisis. The group’s updated reports indicate that Islamist extremists — primarily Boko Haram and its splinter ISWAP, along with Fulani militants — have killed over 100,000 Christians since the 2009 uprising, with nearly 19,100 churches and thousands of Christian schools destroyed in the same period.
As previously reported by NaijaChoice News, these attacks have intensified across northern states like Borno, Yobe, Adamawa, Kaduna, Plateau, and Benue, where entire Christian villages have been razed, farmers displaced, and worshippers slaughtered during Sunday services. Recent Intersociety figures also show over 7,000 Christians killed in the first seven months of 2025 alone — an average of more than 30 deaths daily.
Open Doors and Genocide Watch have consistently ranked Nigeria among the deadliest places for Christians, noting that the country accounts for a staggering percentage of faith-based killings worldwide. While some analysts, including those cited by the BBC and Al Jazeera, argue the violence is part of a broader insurgency that has also claimed Muslim lives and is complicated by farmer-herder clashes, watchdogs insist the targeting of Christians — through church burnings, abductions of clerics, and forced conversions — bears the hallmarks of religious cleansing.
Maher’s intervention has triggered mixed reactions in Nigeria and abroad. Supporters, including Nigerian Christian groups and diaspora voices, hailed him for shining a light on what they call “a silent genocide” ignored by Western media obsessed with other conflicts. Critics, however, accused him of oversimplifying a multifaceted security crisis that successive governments have struggled to contain.
The Bola Tinubu administration has repeatedly vowed to crush the insurgents, with military operations claiming successes against Boko Haram camps. Yet, as NaijaChoice News has documented in past reports, attacks persist, with communities still burying victims weekly and thousands living in IDP camps.
Maher ended his segment with a pointed question that continues to resonate: why the global silence and lack of campus protests when the victims are African Christians rather than other groups?
The comedian’s remarks have reignited calls for stronger international pressure, including potential US congressional hearings and sanctions on perpetrators. Whether this will translate into concrete action remains to be seen — but for millions of Nigerian Christians, the message is clear: the world can no longer claim ignorance.
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