Comedian and political commentator Bill Maher has accused mainstream media outlets of ignoring the mass slaughter of Christians in Nigeria, calling it a deliberate blind spot in global reporting.
Speaking on his HBO program Real Time with Bill Maher last Friday, Maher said Islamist extremists are carrying out "a genocide attempt" against Nigeria's Christian population, yet the world remains largely silent.
"Nigeria - the fact that this issue has not gotten on people's radar - it's pretty amazing," Maher said. "If you don't know what's going on in Nigeria, your media sources are poor. You are in a bubble."
Maher, who openly acknowledged he is not a Christian, insisted the attacks are unmistakably targeted.
"They are systematically killing the Christians in Nigeria," he said. "These are the Islamists - Boko Haram."
"This is so much more of a genocide attempt than what is going on in Gaza," he continued. "They are literally attempting to wipe out the Christian population of an entire country."
"Where are the students protesting this?"
South Carolina Republican Congresswoman Nancy Mace, who appeared alongside Maher, agreed that the media has avoided serious reporting on Nigeria. She noted that in her view, part of the silence stems from the fact the crisis is unfolding in Africa.
Maher went further, pointing to antisemitism as an impetus behind the media blockade. He stated bluntly: "It's because the Jews aren't involved. That's why. It's the Christians and the Muslims, so who cares?"
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NEW: Bill Maher rips the media for ignoring the slaughtering of Christians in Nigeria, claims the media is ignoring it because the "Jews aren't involved."
— Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg) September 27, 2025
Over 7000 Christians have been killed in Nigeria alone this year.
Since 2009, 125,000 Christians have been slaughtered, &� pic.twitter.com/yujzVBfNtF
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Christian advocacy groups say the scale of the bloodshed is staggering. Since 2009, extremist groups and armed militias have killed more than 52,000 Nigerian Christians.
Bill Maher, whose exact source was unclear, suggested the death toll was as high as 100,000. "They've killed over 100,000 since 2009," he told his audience.
Meanwhile, more than 19,000 churches, seminaries, and Christian schools have been destroyed, while millions of believers have been driven from their homes.
This year alone, advocacy organisations say more than 7,000 Christians have already been murdered, with thousands more abducted. Pastors have been kidnapped during church services. Congregations have been massacred while gathered for worship. Families report fleeing their homes in the night as armed militants set fire to entire villages.
The violence is concentrated in Nigeria's Middle Belt and northern states, where Islamist groups including Boko Haram and Islamic State affiliates attack Christian communities.
Fulani militants have also targeted farming villages, torching crops and forcing families to abandon their land. Catholic leaders report that almost 150 priests have been abducted over the past decade, many never seen again.
Yet despite the scale of atrocities, the crisis is often described in global media as "farmer-herder clashes" - language critics say strips away the clear religious persecution taking place.
The violence against Christians in Nigeria is an ongoing phenomenon. Writing for The Daily Declaration, Noah Roet, CEO of Voice of the Martyrs Australia, recently documented some of the latest tragedies to take place there:
Five Christians from Gumel village in Tafawa Balewa County visited their farms on 27 August and discovered cattle grazing where crops should have been. When they confronted the herdsmen, they were met with violence. According to Reverend Samson Habila, local chair of the Christian Association of Nigeria in the area, one man was killed and three others injured. The wounded were first taken to the General Hospital in Tafawa Balewa, then referred to Jos University Teaching Hospital for more serious treatment.
Earlier that same week, the Pyekman community also suffered brutal raids. On 25 August, two Christian women and a teenage boy were assaulted as they walked home from their fields. One woman was slashed across the hand, the teenager also suffered machete wounds, and a second woman had her ear cut off. Scores of Christian farmers have also lost large portions of their crops after the herdsmen allowed their cattle to roam freely over farmland.
The United Nations and advocacy groups estimate between 5 and 12 million Nigerians - most of them Christians - have been forced into internal displacement camps or across international borders. Families who once lived on farmland now survive in makeshift shelters, often relying on aid.
Congressman Chris Smith of New Jersey has repeatedly drawn attention to the crisis, noting that Nigeria accounts for more than 80 per cent of Christian deaths worldwide.
Watchdog organisation Open Doors, in its 2025 World Watch List, ranks Nigeria seventh among the most dangerous countries for Christians. Of the six nations ahead of it - North Korea, Somalia, Yemen, Libya, Sudan, and Eritrea - none has as large a Christian population, meaning Nigeria's loss is uniquely devastating to the global church.
Nigeria's President Bola Tinubu has condemned attacks and promised justice, but accountability is rare. After more than 100 Christians were massacred in Benue state this past summer, authorities pledged investigations. Months later, no perpetrators have been brought to trial. Human rights groups accuse Nigeria's security forces of responding too slowly, or in some cases failing to act at all.
Bill Maher's remarks, though coming from outside the Christian faith, have spotlighted what church leaders and advocates have said for years: Nigeria's Christians are enduring a genocide that has been ignored by much of the world.
The applause that followed Maher's comments shows many everyday people recognise the truth when it is finally spoken aloud. Yet for Christians in Nigeria, acknowledgement is not enough. They need prayer, advocacy, and urgent international action before more lives are lost.