One in five Christians in Africa face persecution for their faith — World Watch List 2026

Christian houses in Chibok, Nigeria, were burned down by Boko Haram militants.

One in five Christians in Africa face high levels of persecution and discrimination for their faith, says Open Doors International in it’s 2026 World Watch List (WWL) which was released today.

The number of Christians around the world in this category is up by eight million from last year to a record 380 million, according to the WWL. This tally represents one in seven Christians worldwide and two in five across Asia. Thirteen Christians are killed every day for their faith across the world.

The WWL, now in its 33rd year, ranks the top 50 countries where Christians face the most extreme persecution and discrimination worldwide and creates awareness of the hardships that persecuted Christians face every day.

Three hundred and fifteen million Christians face very high or extreme levels of persecution and discrimination for their faith in the top 50 countries on the list.

Some of the biggest concerns on this year’s list are the violent surge in persecution in Syria, the religiously-motivated killing of Christians in Nigeria, the enormous scale of persecution across sub-Saharan Africa, and the global pattern of churches driven underground by surveillance and heavy regulations.

Top 5 countries

North Korea holds the number-one spot on the WWL for the fourth straight year and the 24th time since the first WWL in 1993. This country has been the most dangerous place for Christians to live for 29 of the last 30 years, with Christians and their families being deported to labour camps or executed.

This year, the violence score in North Korea rose even further, with Christians facing possible public execution if they are discovered. Despite this, China (15) is arresting and repatriating hundreds of North Korean (1) escapees as “illegal immigrants” with no concern for the fate they face — a fate considerably more severe for Christian converts.

Somalia is once again in the second place this year — the same as last year. Yemen follows in third place, Sudan in fourth place and Eritrea in fifth place.

Violence against Christians surges in Syria

Rubble at Saint Elias church in Dweilaa, Damascus, after an attack in Syria.

This year, Syria (6) has recorded the largest rise on the WWL — jumping 12 positions from number 18 in 2025 to number six this year, becoming the only newcomer to the WWL top 10. Syria has leapt into the top 10, with a massive surge in reported violence towards its Christian minority. It follows the fall of Bashar al-Assad’s presidency in December 2024 and has led to thousands of Christians fleeing the country.

The spike in violence and persecution for Christians was mostly caused by a strong increase in the number of reported Christians killed, churches attacked and Christian schools being closed. A total of 27 Christians were killed in the reporting period, with a suicide attack at a Damascus church in June 2025 claiming 22 lives.

Syria’s interim constitution establishes Islamic jurisprudence as the main source of legislation. Vehicles equipped with loudspeakers now roam the Christian neighbourhoods of Damascus, exhorting residents to convert to Islam. Meanwhile, several churches have had threatening messages painted on their walls. The Christian population is dwindling, as Open Doors estimates that only 300 000 Christians remain in the country — down from 1.1 million in 2015.

Unfolding tragedy in Nigeria

The religiously motivated killing of Christians in Nigeria (7) has sharply risen in this year’s reporting period. The data clearly shows that Christians are targeted in a picture that is mirrored across several sub-Saharan African nations. Of 4 849 Christians known to be killed worldwide for their faith during the reporting period, 3 490 were Nigerian — an increase from 3 100 the previous year and 72% of the total. A total of 3.4 million Nigerians were internally displaced.

Nigeria has been ranked the most violent country for Christians for eight consecutive years. Multiple terror groups such as Lakurawa, Mahmuda, Ansaru, Boko Haram, Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) and the Fulani militants are active in the country.

The country has drawn international attention, following a series of deadly attacks against Christian communities, the mass kidnapping of 303 schoolchildren and 258 people (mostly women and children) killed in a Yelwata attack in June 2025. This prompted condemnation and then intervention by US President Donald Trump, who launched an attack on terror groups in Nigeria on December 26.

The data recorded in this year’s reporting period shows that, in most northern states, Christians have clearly been disproportionately targeted. These include:

  • Benue State in north-central Nigeria, where 1 310 Christians were killed.
  • Plateau State in north-central Nigeria, where 546 Christians were killed. 
  • Taraba State in Northeast Nigeria, where 73 Christians were killed.
  • Northwestern Kaduna State, where 1 116 Christians were abducted in 2025.
A group of displaced women in Benue State, Nigeria, sit around helplessly after 200 people were killed in a June attack and thousands were left destitute.

Dark picture in sub-Saharan Africa

The scale of persecution across sub-Saharan Africa is staggering, with 14 nations in this region on the 2026 WWL and one in every eight Christians globally living in these 14 countries. Three of these, Sudan (4), Nigeria (7) and Mali (15), have the maximum possible score for violence — the only three such nations in the world. Four of the top 10 countries on the list are now from sub-Saharan Africa.

Violence scores across SSA have surged drastically. 10 years ago, the 12 sub-Saharan countries on the list had a combined violence score that was 49% of the maximum possible score. In 2026, the combined violence score of the 14 sub-Saharan African countries on the list, comprising 721 million people (nearly half of whom are Christian), represents 88% of the maximum possible score.

A similar pattern can be seen across the region: Islamist militants enter the vacuum in law and order left by weak governance, war and civil conflicts. It means they can operate with impunity across parts of Nigeria (7), Burkina Faso (16), Mali (15), the Democratic Republic of the Congo (29), the Central African Republic (22), Somalia (2), Niger (26), Mozambique (39), Sudan (4), Ethiopia (36), Eritrea (5) and Comoros (43). Their stated aim is to create “Sharia states” operating under their deadly interpretation of Islamic law.

Open Doors currently runs the Arise Africa campaign, a multi-year response to the persistent violence waged upon Christians in sub-Saharan Africa. Working with Christian leaders throughout sub-Saharan Africa, the campaign aims to enable the African church to stand in faith where persecution is most extreme.

Churches driven underground

The 2026 WWL also shows a global pattern of Churches and Christians being driven underground by surveillance and crippling regulations, examples including Algeria (20) and China (17).

In Algeria, all 47 Protestant churches have now been forced to close, pushing Christians into isolation. The pressure is felt online too, with authorities shutting down a Christian Facebook group with more than 50 000 followers and blocking church activities. More than 75% of Algerian Christians have lost connection to a church fellowship.

Similar dynamics play out in China. Regulations put in place in September 2025 for online behaviour prohibit Bible apps, fundraising and outreach to the youth, and require religious leaders to openly support the Chinese Communist Party. Intensive surveillance, both human and technological, has forced China’s independent house churches to fragment, downsizing from large commercial gatherings into covert groups of 10 to 20 people in private homes.

Signage outside a church in China prohibiting minors from entering the religious site.

This pattern can also be seen in Mauritania (21), Tunisia (31) and Vietnam (55), where tighter bureaucratic control, surveillance and vague regulations are systematically isolating Christians from any means of meeting to pray, study or worship. In Mauritania, people can get the death penalty for apostasy from Islam. In Tunisia, the authoritarian return in 2021 caused intensified surveillance, raids on church gatherings and the arrest of foreign Christians.

Most important general trends

The most important general trends of the 2026 WWL are:

  • The total number of Christians killed for their faith increased from 4 476 cases in the WWL 2025 to 4 849 in the WWL 2026 reporting period.
  • The number of churches or public Christian properties attacked in differing forms of severity decreased from 7 679 to 3 632 cases.
  • The number of Christians detained for their faith decreased from 3 604 to 3 414 cases.
  • The number of Christians sentenced for their faith increased from 1 140 to 1 298 cases.
  • The number of Christians abducted for faith-related reasons decreased from 3 775 to 3 302 cases.
  • The number of cases of Christians raped or otherwise sexually harassed for faith-related reasons increased from 3 123 to 4 055 cases.
  • The same applies for cases of forced marriages of Christians to non-Christians: The number increased from 821 to 1 147 cases.
  • The number of cases of Christians who have been otherwise physically or mentally abused for faith-related reasons (including beatings and death threats) increased from 54 780 to 67 843 cases.
  • There were 20 084 cases of houses or other property (excluding shops) of Christians attacked in the WWL 2025 reporting period. This number decreased to 17 609 in the WWL 2026 reporting period.
  • The number of cases of shops or businesses of Christians being attacked decreased from 8 284 to 8 185 cases.
  • Because of violence – and also pressure (especially where converts had to leave their homes and communities) – the number of Christians forced to leave their homes or go into hiding in-country for faith-related reasons increased from 183 709 to 201 427 cases.
  • The number of Christians forced to leave their country for faith-related reasons decreased from 26 062 to 22 702 cases.

Bible Access List

The Bible Access List was published on October 2 2025 by Open Doors International and the Digital Bible Society in collaboration with other like-minded organisations. This list, covering 88 countries, identifies the countries where access to Scripture is most restricted and where Bible shortages are most severe.

The research shows a close connection between persecution and access to the Bible. Oppressive governments, extremist groups and extended families understand that cutting believers off from Scripture weakens their faith and fractures their communities. In countries where Christians face the greatest persecution, they also face the greatest barriers to accessing God’s Word.

Open Doors’ WWL data was used to help determine where persecution creates an environment where access to God’s Word is difficult. Many of the countries near the top of the WWL are also at the top of the Bible Access List’s restrictions list, which underlines the reality that believers in many of the world’s most dangerous places are cut off from God’s Word because of persecution. The report estimates that Christians who desire the Bible have considerable access restrictions in more than 50 countries.

Freedom of religion or belief

Lynette Leibach, executive director of Open Doors Africa, says: “Freedom of religion or belief is a basic right — yet religious identity significantly increases Christians’ vulnerability to discrimination and persecution.

“The 2026 WWL places the spotlight on hotspots like Syria and Nigeria, whilst the trends show how widespread persecution and discrimination against Christians are. The 388 million represent individuals, families and communities — each with a context, story and face — they are not just a number. Each one needs comfort and courage to face their reality. Open Doors and our partners work towards that.”

Visit www.opendoors.org.za to download the full 2026 World Watch List and view the top 50 country profiles and persecution statistics.

Subscribe to Newsletter

Please help us to keep on publishing news that brings Hope in Jesus:

>> Donate  >> Become a Super Subscriber

VISIT OUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL: https://www.youtube.com/gatewaynews100

COMMENTING GUIDELINES
You are welcome to engage with our articles by making comments [in the Comments area below] that add value to a topic or to engage in thoughtful, constructive discussion with fellow readers. Comments that contain vulgar language will be removed. Hostile, demeaning, disrespectful, propagandistic and off-topic comments may also be moved. This is a Christian website and if you wish to vent against Christian beliefs you have probably come to the wrong place and your comments may be removed. Ongoing debates and repetitiveness will not be tolerated. You will also disqualify yourself from commenting if you engage in trolling.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*


Click banner for more info