

Updating your news feed...

NEWS EXPRESS is Nigeria’s leading online newspaper. Published by Africa’s international award-winning journalist, Mr. Isaac Umunna, NEWS EXPRESS is Nigeria’s first truly professional online daily newspaper. It is published from Lagos, Nigeria’s economic and media hub, and has a provision for occasional special print editions. Thanks to our vast network of sources and dedicated team of professional journalists and contributors spread across Nigeria and overseas, NEWS EXPRESS has become synonymous with newsbreaks and exclusive stories from around the world.


























Loading banners
Loading banners...


The General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), Pastor Enoch Adeboye and the founder of The Living Faith Church Worldwide, Bishop David Oyedepo, have praised the United States President, Donald Trump for taking recent military actions against terrorism in Nigeria.
Speaking at an event tagged “Faith Heroes Award Gala,” organised by the Save Nigeria Group, U.S.A at the Hilton Garden Inn, Capitol Hill, Washington, D.C, with the participation of the US-Nigeria Civil Society Coalition, they called for more of such action to stem the tide of the unrelenting terror attacks by extremists in Nigeria.
The clerics’ appeal came as former United States Ambassador-at-Large for International Religious Freedom, Sam Brownback, and Dr. Katrina Swett, a prominent advocate for human rights, religious freedom and international justice, criticised Nigerian authorities for failing to protect citizens of all faiths from extremist violence.
In an emotion-laden address, Adeboye said terrorism had worsened since the US December attacks on terrorist camps in northern Nigeria.
He said the United States and other Western powers would need to take more decisive action if peace was to return to Nigeria.
Drawing from Isaac Newton’s first law of motion, Adeboye said Nigeria was trapped by what he described as a structure of untouchables, powerful actors who make the fight against terrorism difficult from within.
“There are certain people in my country that, I regret to say, are untouchable, and only God can deal with them,” Adeboye said, adding: “If you want to help us, help us more. No matter who is in office in Nigeria, only God can help us. Use your influence to help us.”
Adeboye, who rued that “terrorism is now at my doorstep,” appealed for a global coalition, led by the United States and its Western allies, to help defeat terrorism in Nigeria, while cautioning that the violence that has consumed communities across the country was no longer distant from him.
Saying that the scale of the crisis had moved beyond what any religious leader or local institution could address alone, Adeboye warned that without external support, Nigeria might not know peace as terrorists are emboldened and communities were being overrun.
Acknowledging that people of different religions have suffered from terrorist attacks, Adeboye said Christians had become the prime targets of many of the killings, emphasizing that none of the major on-going attacks could be traced to Christians.
He said that terrorists were mocking the faith of their victims.
“They are asking, ‘where is their God?” Adeboye said, adding that he had gone to God in agony and deep prayer several times over the crisis.
On criticism that he had maintained a stoic silence while extremists carried out the killings and kidnaps of Christians and other vulnerable communities across Nigeria, Adebao said that as an elder religious leader, he embarked on a “spiritual warfare” rather than scream to escalate tension with concomitant reactions.
Revealing what RCCG has done to help victims of terrorism, Adeboye said the church had established an internally displaced persons camp to help victims of terrorist violence, revealing that victims are provided food and relief materials, while plans are underway to establish a secondary school for young people in the camp, along with skills training for adults.
The crisis, he said, had created an estimated 11 million displaced persons, many of whom had lost homes, livelihoods and access to education.
Adeboye, however, said he did not support sweeping accusations that the administration of President Bola Tinubu was doing nothing to fight terrorism.
He said, like Trump, Tinubu’s role as commander-in-chief is to give instructions to the military, but the effectiveness of those instructions depends on execution.
The cleric said he had advised Tinubu to meet with Trump to demonstrate seriousness in the fight against terrorism before the December military action.
Though he said he does not agree with everything Trump says , he described the American president as the best politician he has ever known because, according to him, Trump acts on his promises.
“To be a good politician, you must be able to speak two different things from the same mouth,” Adeboye said. “And I like him because when he says, ‘I want to do this,’ you better get ready.”
Adeboye said that as Trump winds down the Iran war, he should complete the good work he started in December against terrorist camps in Nigeria.
Bishop Oyedepo, who was represented at the event, on his part, said Nigeria is “virtually at the brink of collapse.”
Throwing his weight behind the “Nigeria Religious Freedom and Accountability Act of 2026,” Oyedepo cited the horrific data compiled within the US Congressional findings, which he said confirmed the stark reality that Nigeri is bleeding.
The findings reveal that between 2009 and 2025, an estimated 50,000 to 125,000 Christians have been martyred, with over 19,000 churches destroyed. Shockingly, the report confirms that Nigeria alone accounts for a staggering 72 per cent of all Christians martyred worldwide.
Oyedepo backed the US legislative framework seeking to designate militant groups as Foreign Terrorist Organizations (FTOs) under international law, referencing the brutal massacres in Benue and Plateau States that claimed over 9,500 lives between 2023 and 2025 alone.
“From the above, you can see that the happenings in our country today call for urgent action from all stakeholders and well-meaning individuals to prevent a situation of total anarchy,” Oyedepo warned.
“The intervention of the United States of America in Nigeria’s affairs is a most welcome one,” Oyedepo noted, expressing deep gratitude to President Trump for his passionate concern.
He sais: “My heart bleeds as I put down these few lines. We look forward to a nation that will be safe, peaceful, and prosperous again.”
In his remarks, Brownback, a former governor of Kansas, who also served in the United States Senate and House of Representatives, said it was painful that Nigeria is still bleeding.
He warned that the country risks losing the nation if terrorists are allowed to overrun it.
Brownback said the United States wants to help Nigeria defeat terrorism so that Nigerians could fulfil the promise of their country.
He described Nigeria as being “out in the fork” and urged Nigerians and their allies to subdue terrorist networks and resist any attempt to turn the country into a caliphate.
Swett, on her part, described Nigeria as a country of extraordinary people and said America must do more to help Nigeria fight terrorism.
“Yes, the future is in the hands of Nigerians, but America has powerful leverage to do more,” she said.
She expressed satisfaction that the Trump administration was placing Nigeria at the centre of international discussion on religious freedom and terrorism.
Also speaking at the event, Stephen Osemwegie, president of Save Nigeria Group USA and convener of the US-Nigeria Civil Society Coalition, said the mission would not be complete until the entire terrorist network in Nigeria are dismantled.
“Terrorism is not a Nigerian or American issue,” Osemwegie said. “We need global support to establish global peace.”
He urged both chambers of the United States Congress to speedily pass H.R. 7457, the Nigeria Religious Freedom and Accountability Act of 2025, and send it to President Trump for signature.
Osemwegie paid tribute to two members of Congress, Christopher Smith of New Jersey’s 4th Congressional District and Riley Moore of West Virginia’s 2nd Congressional District, for their sustained efforts in keeping terrorism in Nigeria on the American policy agenda.
He also praised Rev. Ezekiel Dachomo and Leah Sharibu, describing them as symbols of Christian resilience in the face of persecution.
The event, which organisers called “Thank You, America,” brought together religious leaders, Nigerian diaspora advocates and American human rights voices pressing for stronger action against terrorism and religious persecution in Nigeria.
Among those honourFight against terrorismd witFight against terrorismh the Faith Heroes Award was Bishop David Oyedepo of Living Faith Church, who was represented at the event.
For the organisers, the Washington gathering was both a tribute and a warning: a tribute to those they say have stood for persecuted Christians in Nigeria, and a warning that without global intervention, the crisis could further unravel Africa’s most populous nation.
The gala night capped off a week of intense advocacy by Save Nigeria USA, which began on Saturday with a massive, roaring Save Nigeria Rally at MacPherson Square, just steps away from the White House.
With 26 civil society groups united under a single banner, the diaspora community has made it clear that they will no longer remain silent while their homeland bleeds. (The Sun)