Protest in Nigeria against the killing of Christians. / Photo: www.vaticannews.va
Ishtartv.com
- thediplomatinspain.com
Eduardo
González, 9 December, 2025
The
PP Parliamentary Group has urged the Government to “strengthen Spanish
diplomatic action in defense of religious freedom and persecuted Christian
communities” worldwide and to make this issue “a priority in foreign policy,
international cooperation, and within the framework of the European Union.”
In
a non-binding motion registered in early November for debate in the Foreign
Affairs Committee, the People’s Party (PP) parliamentary group denounces that
the right to religious freedom “continues to be systematically violated in too
many parts of the world” and that “almost two-thirds of the world’s population
live in countries with serious violations of religious freedom.”
According
to the ‘Religious Freedom in the World 2025 Report’ by the pontifical
foundation Aid to the Church in Need, religious freedom suffers “serious
violations” in 62 countries, and in 24 of them, “there is persecution with
serious and systematic violations affecting a total of 4.1 billion people in
countries such as China, India, Nigeria, and North Korea.” “In the other 38
countries, the population is exposed to discrimination on religious grounds,
which could affect more than 1.3 billion people,” it adds.
“Christians
today constitute one of the most persecuted religious communities globally,”
the PP asserts. This is according to the World Watch List report. The 2024
report from Open Doors states that “more than 365 million Christians suffer
high levels of persecution, which is equivalent to one in seven Christians
worldwide.” Furthermore, according to the report, in just twelve months, “4,998
murders were recorded because of the Christian faith,” and “of all those
murders, more than 80% occurred in Nigeria, which maintains this country as the
deadliest in the world for Christians.”
In
Nigeria, the text asserts, terrorist organizations, such as Boko Haram and the
Islamic State in West Africa, have perpetrated indiscriminate attacks against
churches, Christian villages, and religious leaders, “causing thousands of
deaths and mass displacements.” “An example of this massacre is the more than
1,300 people killed in Plateau alone between December 2023 and February 2024,
according to Amnesty International,” it recalls.
In
addition, “in Pakistan, abusive blasphemy laws are used to justify “Attacks,
lynchings, and unjust imprisonments against Christians” and “in India,
campaigns of violence and exclusion against Christian communities have
intensified, with churches burned and worshippers attacked.” In Syria, the PP
continues, “the Christian population has practically disappeared,” with
“neighborhoods and churches devastated,” and “in North Korea, the practice of
Christianity continues to be punished with forced labor or even the death
penalty.”
“The
persecution of Christians is not limited to one continent,” since “it extends
across Africa, Asia, and the Middle East, where ancient communities, such as
those in Iraq and Syria, have been practically annihilated in the last decade,”
the Popular Group denounces. “All of this constitutes a true humanitarian and
cultural tragedy, since the disappearance of Christians in these regions
represents, in addition to a violation of Human Rights, the loss of an
essential part of universal history,” it warns.
For
all these reasons, the PP urges the Government to “strengthen Spanish
diplomatic action in defense of religious freedom and Christian communities.”
persecuted, placing this issue as a priority in foreign policy, international
cooperation, and within the framework of the European Union,” and to “promote
in the Council of Europe, the European Union, and the United Nations the
production of reports and strong resolutions condemning the massacres and
persecution of Christians, promoting the recognition of these acts as serious
human rights violations or crimes against humanity.”
It
also calls for “the creation of international mechanisms for investigation and
justice to document, prosecute, and punish those responsible for attacks,
massacres, and crimes committed against Christian communities worldwide” and
the promotion of “awareness and education campaigns in Spain and throughout
Europe to raise awareness about the situation of persecuted Christians,”
fostering “a culture of freedom, respect, and tolerance toward all religious
denominations.”
The
PP also urges the government to “defend the inclusion of religious freedom and
the protection of Christian minorities as a condition in EU and Spanish
international agreements with third countries, linking the cooperation and
bilateral relations with respect for the effective respect of human rights.”
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