Manny Ita  –

The United States House of Representatives’ Subcommittee on Africa is scheduled to hold a high-stakes hearing today, February 5, 2026, to investigate escalating reports of systematic violence and alleged genocide in Nigeria. The session follows a surge in petitions from international human rights organizations and Nigerian diaspora groups regarding targeted killings in the North-Central and North-West regions. Lawmakers are expected to review evidence of what some advocacy groups describe as a “silent genocide” targeting specific ethnic and religious communities. “The international community cannot remain a bystander while the scale of violence reaches a tipping point that threatens regional stability,” a member of the subcommittee stated ahead of the hearing.

​The session aims to determine whether the Nigerian government’s response to the violence—often attributed to armed bandits, extremist groups, and herdsmen—has been sufficient or if there are elements of complicity and state failure. Witnesses invited to testify include human rights monitors, survivors of recent massacres, and security analysts. A primary focus of the discussion will be the recent Lakurawa extremist attacks and the perennial farmer-herder conflicts that have claimed thousands of lives. One human rights advocate scheduled to speak noted that the goal is to “compel a more rigorous investigative framework and potentially trigger targeted sanctions if systemic negligence is proven.”

​The Nigerian government has historically dismissed such “genocide” labels as inflammatory and inaccurate, characterizing the violence as a complex blend of criminality and resource-based conflict. Nigerian diplomatic officials in Washington have reportedly been lobbying against the hearing, arguing that it undermines the sovereignty of the state and overlooks the military’s efforts to curb insurgency. “We are dealing with a multifaceted security challenge, not a state-sponsored extermination,” a government spokesperson remarked in response to the session’s agenda. The outcome of today’s hearing could significantly influence future U.S.-Nigeria relations, including military aid and security cooperation.

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Adeniyi Ifetayo Moses is an Entrepreneur, Award winning Celebrity journalist, Luxury and Lifestyle Reporter with Ben tv London and Publisher, Megastar Magazine. He has carved a niche for himself with over 15 years of experience in celebrity Journalism and Media PR.

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