Mexican bishops react to shocking massacre of Christians in Benue State. Full statement, prayers, and calls for justice revealed. Read the full story now.
… “These killings cry out to heaven,” says Mexican Episcopal Conference as international outrage grows
A wave of international outrage is building following the brutal massacre of over 200 Christians in Yelwata, Guma Local Government Area of Benue State, Nigeria, as the Mexican Episcopal Conference has strongly condemned the attack, calling it an act of “inhuman violence that cries out to heaven.”
In a powerful statement signed by Bishop Ramón Castro Castro, President of the Conference, and Bishop Héctor M. Pérez Villarreal, Secretary General, the Mexican bishops expressed their shock and deep sorrow over the gruesome June 13 killings, which reportedly involved arson, machete attacks, and summary executions, leaving entire families wiped out in their sleep.
“More than two hundred Christian brothers and sisters were brutally murdered while they slept, victims of armed attacks that included arson, bladed weapons, and executions,” the bishops stated.
The bishops further declared that the level of violence witnessed in Benue reflects a growing pattern of religious and ethnic persecution that should concern the entire global Christian community and human rights institutions. They emphasized that Christian lives in Nigeria are increasingly under siege, even as local authorities struggle to contain escalating insecurity in the country’s Middle Belt region.
The Conference called on Catholics and all ecclesiastical communities in Mexico to dedicate masses, Eucharists, and holy hours in remembrance of the Benue victims, who they described as martyrs of the faith.
“We unite with our brother bishops in Nigeria… to ask the Lord for peace and to strongly renew the call for an end to war, persecution, and religious or ethnic violence,” the bishops added.
They also urged the international community to shine a light on the relentless killings of Christians in Nigeria, which they say have persisted largely unchecked.
Despite repeated condemnations from local and international observers, the Nigerian government is yet to release an official casualty figure or make high-profile arrests over the Yelwata massacre, deepening suspicions of impunity and silence in the face of what some critics now describe as religious cleansing.
The Mexican bishops’ intervention now places Nigeria’s security failures under renewed global spotlight, especially as religious groups across Latin America begin organizing prayer vigils for the victims.
This incident comes amid growing insecurity in Benue State, a region that has faced repeated attacks by suspected armed herdsmen and militia groups, often with religious and ethnic undertones.
With public anger rising and fresh calls for justice, the question remains: how many more innocent lives must be lost before decisive action is taken?



