NIGERIA: Fourth priest abducted in five months

A man with a Nigerian flag in Port Harcourt, Nigeria (© Emmanuel Ikwuegbu)
A man with a Nigerian flag in Port Harcourt, Nigeria (© Emmanuel Ikwuegbu)

Extremists kidnapped another Catholic priest in Nigeria on Wednesday morning (15th May) – bringing the number of clerics kidnapped in the country this year to four.

The gunmen who captured Father Basil Gbuzuo have not contacted the Church, according to a statement by Onitsha Archdiocese sent to Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need (ACN).

Father Prudentius Aroh, Chancellor of Onitsha Archdiocese wrote that Archbishop Valerian Maduka Okeke of Onitsha was inviting “all Christ’s faithful and all men and women of goodwill to earnestly pray for the quick and safe release of the priest as we intensify our efforts to ensure his freedom”.

Father Aroh added: “We commend our brother [Father Gbuzuo] to the powerful intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of Priests, for his speedy release from the hands of his kidnappers.”

Father Gbuzuo is the fourth priest to have been kidnapped in Nigeria this year, but the other three – two Claretian missionaries and a parish priest from Benin City Archdiocese – have already been released.

Three priests kidnapped in the country in previous years – one in 2019 and two in 2022 – are still missing.

In 2023, Nigeria topped the list of countries with cases of abducted priests and religious with 28 incidents in total, including three Sisters.

ACN has called for the immediate and unconditional release of Father Gbuzuo, joining its voice with those of Nigerian Church leaders demanding that the government step up security in the African nation.