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: Dr Max Amuchie
By MAX AMUCHIE
Africa is home to one of the fastest-growing Christian populations in the world. From just 10 million adherents in the early 20th century, the number has grown to an estimated 750 million today—nearly half of the continent’s population.
Yet this remarkable growth now faces a defining security test.
A recent report by the International Society for Civil Liberties and Rule of Law argues that Christians in several African countries are under mounting pressure from extremist violence. The concern is particularly acute in Nigeria, Democratic Republic of the Congo and Ethiopia, three countries that together account for roughly 300 million Christians.
In Nigeria, armed groups such as Fulani militia, Boko Haram and ISWAP have carried out attacks for over a decade, targeting mostly Christian villages, worship centres and schools. In eastern Congo, the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) has been linked to deadly assaults on civilians. In parts of East Africa, Al-Shabaab continues cross-border operations.
The humanitarian consequences are severe: killings, abductions, internal displacement and destruction of community infrastructure. According to the 2026 World Watch List by Open Doors, hundreds of millions of Christians globally experience high levels of persecution, with Africa emerging as a major hotspot.
But security is only part of the challenge. Weak governance, porous borders, poverty and unresolved communal tensions create fertile ground for extremism. At the same time, internal credibility crises within religious institutions, across faith lines can undermine social cohesion.
The reality is that extremist violence in Africa does not spare moderate Muslims or adherents of traditional beliefs. There have been cases in Nigeria for example where moderate Muslims or Muslim communities were targeted and killed as happened on February 3, 2026 in Woro and Nuku communities in Kwara State. Entire communities suffer when the rule of law collapses. While the danger facing Christians in Africa — look at Nigeria’s Middle Belt region — is real, framing the crisis solely as demographic contest risks deepening divisions rather than solving them.
Africa needs coordinated action: strengthened security institutions, accountable governance, interfaith dialogue and economic opportunity for vulnerable youth populations and the political will to combat terrorism sincerely and intentionally.
The future of Christianity in Africa—like the future of Islam and other faiths—will ultimately depend less on demographic projections and more on whether governments can secure lives, protect rights and uphold justice.
The test before the continent is not religious survival alone. It is also whether pluralism itself can endure.
•Dr Max Amuchie, CEO/Editor-in-Chief, Sundiata Post, can be reached via max.a@sundiatapost.com