ABUJA, Nigeria (AP) — Jihadi extremist groups, including Boko Haram and one of its factions, have been blamed for intensified attacks targeting Nigeria’s military bases in the northeast of the country in the last week.
At least two officers and several soldiers have been killed in the attacks, which analysts say shows a remarkable level of coordination.
Over the weekend, Islamic extremists launched at least six attacks in Borno and Yobe states and in the wider Lake Chad region, spiriting away trucks and military hardware from the bases, according to security analysts and security reports.
The Nigerian military said in a statement that the latest attacks between Sunday and Monday were an “attempt by the terrorists to overwhelm troop positions.”
Military spokesman Sani Uba said late Monday that the troops lost an unspecified number of soldiers and a military officer, without providing further details. It adds to a death toll of several soldiers and at least one officer in the past week. Security analysts estimate at least four military officers have been killed in that period.
Africa’s most populous country has long struggled to contain the jihadi violence in its northeast. After launching an insurgency in 2009, Boko Haram has grown into different factions, including the Islamic State West Africa Province, or ISWAP, which is backed by the Islamic State group. The crisis has overstretched the Nigerian military, which also battles other security crises across the conflict-battered north.
What’s inspiring the attacks
The attacks have angered Nigerians, with many accusing President Bola Tinubu’s government and the ruling party of prioritizing next year’s presidential election in which Tinubu is expected to seek reelection.
While ISWAP has staged a growing number of attacks against the military in recent months, observers say this is the first time in recent history that the group has successfully launched simultaneous attacks of this scale in the region.
The attacks show “a remarkable level of coordination” from the group, according to Vincent Foucher, senior research fellow with France’s National Center for Scientific Research who has extensive knowledge of the conflict.
Videos published by ISWAP showed massive weaponry and ammunition, as well as dozens of motorcycles and vehicles that the extremists said were captured during the raids. The Associated Press couldn’t independently verify the details of the video.
A key goal of the jihadis is to restock their weapons arsenal, said Taiwo Adebayo with the Africa-focused Institute for Security Studies.
“When they hit those camps, they strip the base of weapons, burn it down and retreat into the forests,” Adebayo said.
Malik Samuel, a Nigerian security researcher with Good Governance Africa, said that “as long as military bases remain vulnerable to being overrun, ISWAP does not need to spend money buying arms.”
U.S. involvement
The attacks are happening despite a boost from the United States, which has deployed at least 100 troops to support the Nigerian military with training and logistics. That deployment is part of a new security partnership between Nigeria and U.S. that came after U.S. President Donald Trump alleged that Christians are being targeted in Nigeria’s security crisis.
Since the U.S. began to intervene in the security crisis in December last year, its Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance, or ISR, flights have helped the Nigerian military to intensify aerial bombardment of jihadi hideouts, officials have said.
However, ISWAP continues to mount coordinated attacks, which highlight their sophistication and show how dominant they’ve become, Adebayo said.
A major challenge in the region remains the limited presence of security forces and the government in conflict hot spots.
Despite its successes against jihadi groups in the region, the Nigerian military lacks the capacity for sustained operations and quickly moves on to other hot spots, Adebayo said.
“So the (armed) groups are quickly regrouping and delivering attacks elsewhere,” he said.
ROME (AP) — The patriarch of one of the most important Christian churches in the Middle East retired on Tuesday, setting the stage for new leadership as war engulfs the region.
Iraqi Cardinal Louis Sako of the Chaldean Catholic Church said he had asked to retire to pursue “prayer, writing, and simple service,” and that Pope Leo XIV granted his request on the day he had proposed.
Sako, 76, who had occasionally clashed with Iraq’s political leaders, said in a statement that he freely offered his resignation and was leaving “of my own will.”
The Chaldean Catholic Church is one of the nearly two dozen Eastern Rite churches that are in full communion with Rome. It is one of the four that claim links to the ancient Church of the East, located in Mesopotamia, and is today prevalent in Iraq, Iran and Lebanon, as well as in the diaspora.
Sako led the ancient church through the traumatic years of the rise of the Islamic State group in Iraq that devastated the Christian community. His retirement paves the way for a successor to lead the church at a time of new conflict in the region, the U.S.-Israeli war in Iran, that has spilled over into Iraq.
Iran-backed militias in Iraq have launched dozens of attacks targeting U.S. bases, energy facilities, and other targets in the country.
“I led the Chaldean Church under extremely difficult circumstances and amid great challenges. I preserved the unity of its institutions and spared no effort in defending it and the rights of Iraqis and Christians, taking positions and maintaining a presence both inside and outside the country,” Sako said in a statement on the patriarch’s website.
He said that “in these difficult times” he hoped that his successor will possess “solid theological culture, courage, and wisdom — someone who believes in renewal, openness, and dialogue, and who also has a sense of humor. I will respect him and never interfere in his work.”
In July 2023, Sako withdrew from his headquarters in Baghdad and went into self-imposed exile in the Kurdish regional capital for nine months after Iraqi President Abdul Latif Rashid revoked a decree recognizing his position as patriarch of the Chaldeans.
The Iraqi president downplayed his revocation of Sako’s recognition as bureaucratic housekeeping, claiming it did not diminish the patriarch’s legal or religious status, but Sako called it an affront to the church.
At the time of his departure, Sako blamed a campaign against him by Rayan al-Kildani, a fellow Chaldean Christian who is head of the Bablyon Movement political party and founder of a militia called the Babylon Brigades that fought against IS and still patrols much of the Nineveh plains.
He returned to Baghdad in April 2024 after receiving a formal invitation from Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani.
Iraq’s Christian population has dwindled after decades of war and the rise of extremist groups including the Islamic State in the security vacuum that followed the 2003 U.S.-led invasion to unseat the country’s former strongman leader, Saddam Hussein.
The number of Christians in Iraq today is estimated at 150,000, compared with 1.5 million in 2003. Iraq’s total population is more than 40 million.
A 2021 visit by Pope Francis, which Sako helped organize, provided a glimmer of hope that quickly faded. Many of the Christian villages destroyed as IS rampaged across the country remain in ruins, their former inhabitants scattered.
Sako told The Associated Press in an interview in 2023 that he saw it as part of his mandate to protect the rights of Christians.
“Of course, no one defends Christians other than the church,” he said.
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Sewell reported from Beirut.
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Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.
25 to receive organization’s top honors for 2025 work
The Religion Communicators Council (RCC) proudly announces the 2026 Wilbur Award recipients, recognizing exceptional work by 25 media outlets completed in 2025 within the secular (non-religious) media in the fields of print and online journalism, book publishing, podcasts and radio, television and film.
The Wilbur Award is the top honor provided by the RCC and is presented annually to recognize the most outstanding work in the communication of religious issues, values, and themes in secular media. Each winner will receive an individually crafted stained-glass Wilbur trophy.
The RCC has presented the Wilbur Awards annually since 1949. Secular communicators enter work in several categories. Juries of media professionals, coordinated by council members across the country, evaluate submissions on content, creativity, impact, and excellence in communicating religious values. The ultimate criterion is brilliance in communication about faith and religion with fairness and professionalism, honesty and respect.
The award is named for the late Marvin C. Wilbur, a pioneer in religious public relations, longtime council leader, and former Presbyterian Church executive.
The Wilbur Awards will be presented Friday, April 17, in Cincinnati, Ohio, during the RCC’s annual convention, “Coming Together: Charting Our Course.” The Wilbur Award presentation is open to the public at a cost of $125 per person; those interested in attending can register at Religion Communicators Council (rccregistration.org); more about the convention is also posted at that site. Professionals in the field of religious communication are encouraged to attend the full convention; registration closes Monday, April 13.
According to Ryan Koch, president of RCC’s Board of Governors, “For more than seven decades, the RCC’s Wilbur Awards have honored outstanding storytelling in the secular media that explores faith, values, and the human spirit. This year’s honorees carry that remarkable legacy forward with creativity, insight, and conviction.”
Koch adds, “The Wilbur Awards ceremony is always an uplifting reminder of how meaningful, well-crafted communication can foster understanding among people of all beliefs. I encourage anyone in media or communications to join us in celebrating the power of these inspiring stories.”
Brad Pomerance, Wilbur Awards coordinator and RCC Board of Governors member, notes, “The caliber of this year’s Wilbur submissions was deeply encouraging—not only for their excellence, but for the way they illuminate faith and values in a complex world. Many of the entries embody our convention theme, ‘Coming Together: Charting Our Course,’ showing how communication can help us navigate challenges, find common ground, and create a shared path forward. It’s inspiring to see storytellers use their craft to bring people together through understanding and respect.”
Pomerance notes, “The 2026 competition drew a record-breaking number of entries from across the United States and around the world—a testament to the growing global reach of the Wilbur Awards.”
In addition to the 25 Wilbur winning entries, RCC will also be honoring 46 Award of Excellence Recipients and 41 Award of Merit Honorees. The Award of Excellence is for entries deemed to be of excellent quality and unquestionably worthy of recognition. The Award of Merit is presented for work deemed meritorious and worthy of acknowledgment.
Congratulations to the following 2026 Wilbur Award Honorees:
Written Works – Newspaper Articles + Other Written Works, Extra Long:
Wilbur:
Excellence:
Merit:
Written Works – Newspaper Articles + Other Written Works, Long:
Wilbur:
Excellence:
Merit:
Written Works – Newspaper Articles, Medium:
Wilbur:
Merit:
Written Works – Newspaper Articles + Other Written Works, Opinion:
Wilbur:
Excellence:
Merit:
Written Works – Magazines:
Excellence:
Merit:
Books:
Wilbur:
Excellence:
Merit:
Audio Productions – Audio Only News Stories, Long:
Wilbur:
Excellence:
Merit:
Audio Productions – Audio Only News Stories, Medium:
Wilbur:
Excellence:
Merit:
Audio Productions – Long Form, Long:
Wilbur:
Merit:
Audio Productions – Long Form, Medium Series:
Wilbur:
Excellence:
Merit:
Audio Productions – Long Form, Medium Single Work:
Wilbur:
Merit:
Audio Productions – Long Form, Short:
Excellence:
Merit:
Audio-Visual – News Stories, Long:
Excellence:
Merit:
Audio-Visual – News Stories + Other, Medium + Short:
Wilbur:
Excellence:
Merit:
Audio-Visual – Long Form:
Wilbur:
Excellence:
Merit:
Audio-Visual, Digital:
Wilbur:
Merit:
Audio-Visual > Full Length:
Wilbur:
Excellence:
Audio-Visual – Entertainment:
Wilbur:
Images – Photography:
Wilbur:
Excellence:
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About the Religion Communicators Council
The Religion Communicators Council (RCC), founded in 1929, is an association of communications professionals who work for and with a diverse group of faith-based organizations in the areas of communications, public relations, marketing and development.
About the RCC’s Annual Convention
The 2026 annual convention, “Coming Together, Charting Our Course,” will be held April 16-18, 2026, in Cincinnati. Keynote presentations and workshops will include topics such as interfaith dialogue, website and social media analytics, how to keep up with new technologies, crisis management, photography, fundraising, and polarization and conflict, and more. For more information, Convention 2026 | Religion Communicators Council.
Contact:
Ginny Hizer
Religion Communicators Council (RCC)
Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of RNS or Religion News Foundation.