Researchers from the Observatory of Religious Freedom in Africa (ORFA) have reported over 55,910 civilian deaths in Nigeria during a comprehensive four-year study from October 2019 to September 2023.
Operating under the Foundation Platform for Social Transformation, ORFA is committed to monitoring religious freedoms and documenting violations of rights across Nigeria.
One of the lead researchers Professor Param Mallam notes that the study highlights the escalating violence particularly in the North Central Zone and Southern Kaduna, where widespread mass killings, abductions, and family torture are reported to occur with minimal intervention from security forces.
The findings, disclosed in a press release issued by Frans Vierhout, Data Scientist at ORFA,
underscores the alarming trend of mass violence that has largely gone unchallenged as security agencies focus on remote targets rather than addressing the immediate needs of local communities.
Also, the data shows that FEM’s violent activities are predominantly concentrated in the North Central Zone and Southern Kaduna, areas that have suffered significantly from their attacks.
Meanwhile military resources are concentrated in the North-East and North-West of Nigeria, hundred miles from the scenes of the FEM atrocities.
According to the report, “Across the country, over 11,000 incidents of extreme violence took place during the data period, with more than 55,000 killings and 21,000 abductions.
In the North Central zone alone, 3,007 incidents of extreme violence occurred. 2,010 incidents involved killings, 700 were abduction incidents, and 297 were a combination of killings and abductions.”
It also pointed out that the ORFA data project also uncovers a troubling trend in abductions across Nigeria, with incidents rising during the four-year period.
The statistics indicate that 1,665 people were abducted in 2020, 5,907 in 2021, 7,705 in 2022, and 6,255 in 2023.
The release also notes that, by the end of 2023, the International Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC) reported that 3.3 million Nigerians were forcibly displaced from their homes, surviving in makeshift camps.
The authors of the ORFA report have therefore called upon the international community to pay close attention to these alarming findings, emphasizing the critical need for increased global involvement in combating these human rights violations, illustrating a narrative of besieged communities and government indecision
(Editor: Anoyoyo Ogiagboviogie)

