The Catholic Archbishop of Owerri, Most Rev. Lucius Iwejuru Ugorji has said that the rampant and mindless killing of innocent citizens in various parts of Nigeria portrays the country as a people under siege.
He made the lamentation in his 2025 Easter message.
His words: “We are celebrating Easter this year in an atmosphere that breathes pessimism and despair. The general insecurity of life and property is heightened by the rising wave of kidnapping for ransom, and the mindless slaughtering of innocent citizens by criminal gangs.
“We seem to be a nation under siege. No place seems safe: our homes, places of
business, our highways, not even the sacred precincts of places of worship is spared.
“Government’s lack of political will to address the rising criminality across the nation, is pushing the populace to resort to self-help to defend their Iives and sources of livelihood.”
Continuing, Ugorji said: “Economic hardship continues to sweep across the nation on account of the withdrawal of fuel subsidies, and the floating of the national currency.
“The appalling economic condition is worsened, as our national debt continues to surge due to external and internal borrowings to finance budgets and infrastructural projects.
Consequently, the future of the present and future generations is already mortgaged.
“This state of affairs is driving many compatriots to a feeling of cynicism. Having had myriad of shattered dreams and aborted hopes, many Nigerians groan with anguished hearts as they behold a future that promises them little or nothing.”
According to the cleric, the level of disillusionment and despondency that reigns among the citizenry, mirrors the frustration felt by the apostles and disciples at the excruciating passion and humiliating death of Christ.
He said: “After the crucifixion of their Lord and Master, they returned home with shattered dreams and hopes-dispirited, dejected, downcast and miserable.
“In this gloomy and cheerless context, the joyful and heart-warming Easter message resounds: God has raised Jesus to life. He would not permit death to triumph forever nor allow his people to die and perish in their helplessness.
“He desires that Christ and indeed all, should have life and have it to the full.
Amidst our feeling of despair, Easter has a message of hope, that the darkest part of the night is the beginning of dawn.
“This message of hope underscores the fact that though the forces of evil may sometimes seem to have the upper hand over the good, in the long run, the good always triumphs over evil.”







