
(Worthy News) – A Christian woman who was jailed in northern Nigeria’s Bauchi state in 2022 for allegedly insulting Islam was acquitted last week, Morning Star News (MSN) reported on December 20.
The mother of five children, Rhoda Jatau was charged with religious insult for allegedly sharing a WhatsApp post that had condemned the murder of Christian university student Deborah Emmanuel Yakububy by a mob of Muslim classmates, MSN reports. If convicted she faced up to five years’ imprisonment.
After being granted bail in December 2023, Jatau was finally acquitted by a court in Bauchi state, MSN reports. In a press statement, her legal team from ADF International said: “Jatau’s lawyers raised significant legal failures in the prosecution’s case and argued that they had not established the basic elements of their case against Jatau. The grant of bail and final acquittal followed international outcry over Jatau’s imprisonment.”
“These laws punish the innocent for expressing their beliefs, silence people from sharing their faith, and perpetuate societal violence,” the ADF statement continues. “Blasphemy laws throughout Nigeria encourage brutal mob violence and inflict severe harm on minority Muslims, Christian converts and others.”
In a website report about the many forms of extreme persecution faced by Christians in Nigeria, the Open Doors international Christian advocacy organization states: “Christians living in the Shariah (Islamic law) states of northern Nigeria can also face discrimination and oppression as second-class citizens. Converts from Islam often experience rejection from their own families and pressure to renounce their new faith.”
Ruled by an Islamic government, Nigeria ranks sixth on the Open Doors World Watch List 2024 of the top 50 countries where Christians are persecuted.
Copyright 1999-2025 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
More Worthy News
With millions of Americans’ health insurance premiums projected to rise in 2026, due partially to enhanced Obamacare subsidies expiring, Republicans are eyeing health savings accounts as a solution.
President Donald Trump on Tuesday elevated Saudi Arabia to the status of a “major non-NATO ally,” a designation that significantly expands the military relationship between Washington and Riyadh during Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s first White House visit in seven years.
The United States has begun a rapid diplomatic and operational drive to assemble the newly authorized International Stabilization Force (ISF) for Gaza, launching the effort mere hours after the UN Security Council overwhelmingly approved its deployment.
Israeli intelligence revealed Wednesday that a sweeping joint investigation with European security agencies has uncovered a network of Hamas-linked terror cells operating across Europe, with recent plots traced back to Qatar and possibly Turkey, where senior Hamas officials maintain political offices.
The White House is urging members of the U.S. Congress to reject a measure that would restrict the world’s most valuable semiconductor company’s ability to sell advanced artificial intelligence (AI) chips to Communist-run China and other adversary nations, according to people familiar with the matter.
Indonesian authorities say more than 900 residents were evacuated and 170 stranded climbers have now been brought to safety after Mount Semeru — one of the country’s tallest and most active volcanoes — erupted repeatedly on Wednesday.
U.S. President Donald J. Trump has signed legislation compelling his administration to release all classified files related to the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, after mounting pressure from within his own Republican Party.