
VATICAN (CNS): Seventeen Catholic priests, sisters, seminarians and lay workers were murdered in 2025, according to Fides.
Five of the victims were killed in Nigeria where kidnapping priests, seminarians and school students for ransom has plagued the Christian community, Fides reported on December 30.
Archbishop Fortunatus Nwachukwu, a Nigerian and secretary of the Dicastery for Evangelisation’s missionary section, said, “All of this is a cause of great sadness and also some shame because Nigeria is one of the countries with the most religious populations in the world—a people of believers, Christians and Muslims.”
Archbishop Nwachukwu, “We all say that we are people of peace. We must all reject any justification for using religion to commit violent acts, including killing people.”
In a situation of “generalised violence,” particularly in areas where farmers and nomadic shepherds were engaged in violent clashes, the archbishop said, it appears that anti-Christian groups have infiltrated the nomadic groups and are targeting Christians.
All of this is a cause of great sadness and also some shame because Nigeria is one of the countries with the most religious populations in the world—a people of believers, Christians and Muslims
Archbishop Fortunatus Nwachukwu
Asked about the US airstrikes on northwestern Nigeria on December 25, which Donald Trump, the US president, said targeted Islamic State terrorists who were persecuting Christians, the archbishop responded that the Nigerian “government’s paralysis is evident. In this situation, an indirect intervention from outside, to support the state and the government against extremist groups and to help the country remove the causes of widespread violence, might not be entirely unjustified or inappropriate.”
Two catechists were killed in Burkina Faso in January, and Kenya, Sierra Leone and Sudan each suffered the murder of a priest in 2025, bringing to 10 the number of Church personnel killed in Africa during the year.
Fides’ annual list included one priest murdered in Europe—58-year-old Father Grzegorz Dymek, who was found strangled in the rectory of Our Lady of Fatima parish in Klobuck, Poland, in February; and one in North America—Father “Arul” Raj Balaswamy Carasala, 57, a naturalized US citizen from India, who was shot outside Ss. Peter and Paul Catholic Church in Seneca, Kansas, in April. The man who confessed to killing him is undergoing a court-ordered mental health evaluation.
In this situation, an indirect intervention from outside, to support the state and the government against extremist groups and to help the country remove the causes of widespread violence, might not be entirely unjustified or inappropriate
Archbishop Nwachukwu
The other missionaries cited in the report were:
• Sister Evanette Onezaire and Sister Jeanne Voltaire of the Congregation of the Little Sisters of St. Thérèse of the Child Jesus who were murdered by members of an armed militia in Mirebalais, Haiti, in late March.
• Father Bertoldo Pantaleón Estrada, whose body was discovered October 6 in the municipality of Mezcal in Mexico’s Guerrero state two days after he was reported missing.
• Father Donald Martin Ye Naing Win, who was the first priest to die in Myanmar’s ongoing armed conflict. He was found stabbed to death and mutilated on February 14 on the grounds of Our Lady of Lourdes Church in Kan Gyi Taw, a small village in central Myanmar.
• Mark Christian Malaca, a 39-year-old lay teacher at St. Stephen Academy in Laur, Philippines, was shot and killed in early November, reportedly by two men on a motorcycle who wore helmets, face masks and black jackets.


