Gunmen attack a church in Nigeria and kill 2 people

A screengrab taken from a video shared on X showing gunmen attacking a church in Nigeria, where two were reported to have been killed during the attack in Eruku town. (X/@ChristianEmerg1)
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Updated 19 November 2025
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Gunmen attack a church in Nigeria and kill 2 people

  • No group has claimed responsibility for Tuesday night’s attack in Eruku town in central Nigeria
  • Police responded to gunfire and found one person fatally shot inside the church and another nearby

ABUJA: Gunmen attacked a church in Nigeria and killed two people, authorities said, as the country faces Trump administration threats of US military intervention over allegations that Christians are persecuted there.
No group has claimed responsibility for Tuesday night’s attack in Eruku town in central Nigeria. Police responded to gunfire and found one person fatally shot inside the church and another nearby, Kwara state police spokesperson Adetoun Ejire-Adeyemi said in a statement.
Kwara State Gov. AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq in a statement on Wednesday praised Nigerian President Bola Tinubu for the deployment of 900 additional troops there.
Tinubu has delayed his departure to South Africa, where he planned to attend this weekend’s Group of 20 summit of the world’s leading rich and developing nations after the attack and the abduction of 24 schoolgirls in Nigeria’s north on Monday, a spokesperson, Bayo Onanuga, said in a statement.

President Donald Trump earlier this month asserted that Christianity faces an “existential threat” in Nigeria and told the Pentagon to begin preparing for possible military action in the West African nation.
Tinubu has said the characterization of Nigeria as a religiously intolerant country does not reflect the national reality. While Christians are among those targeted, analysts say the majority of victims of armed groups are Muslims in Nigeria’s Muslim-majority north, where most attacks occur.
Nigeria’s central region has been plagued by violence for years as local herders and farmers often clash over limited access to land and water. The clashes have also taken on a religious dimension, giving rise to militias that side with the primarily Muslim herders or the farmers from Christian communities.
Nigeria’s north often sees attacks by the resurgent Boko Haram group, an affiliate of the Daesh group and armed gangs.


Four killed in Ukraine as Moscow and Kyiv exchange drone strikes

Updated 11 March 2026
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Four killed in Ukraine as Moscow and Kyiv exchange drone strikes

  • Kyiv said Russian drone strikes had killed two people and wounded seven more in Kharkiv
  • Synegubov said two people had been killed in the attack on the Shevchenkivsky district

KHARKIV, Ukraine: Russian and Ukrainian drone strikes killed at least four people Wednesday, officials said, as the war between the neighbors dragged on for more than four years with no diplomatic breakthrough in sight.
The latest attacks came with a third round of three-party talks derailed by the war in the Middle East, despite pressure from Washington on both sides to agree to an elusive peace deal.
Kyiv said Russian drone strikes had killed two people and wounded seven more in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv.
Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second-largest city, which lies close to the Russian border, was encircled at the beginning of Russia’s invasion four years ago.
It has been attacked almost daily since Moscow’s forces were pushed back later in 2022.
The governor of the wider region, Oleg Synegubov, said two people had been killed in the attack on the Shevchenkivsky district.
“A civilian enterprise caught fire as a result of the enemy strike,” he said, adding that three women and four men had been hospitalized.
Another Russian drone wounded 20 people in the afternoon, after hitting a civilian minibus in the southeastern city of Kherson, Ukrainian prosecutors said.
In the Russian-occupied part of the southern Zaporizhzhia region, Moscow-installed authorities said two civilians had been killed in their car by a Ukrainian drone strike on the frontline town of Vasylivka.
“The danger of repeated strikes remains,” Kremlin-appointed governor Yevgeny Balitsky said.