ENUGU, Nigeria — Police in Nigeria’s southeastern Enugu State have detained 38 suspects in connection with the brazen assassination of Rev. Fr. Matthew Eya, a prominent Catholic priest gunned down on a rural road last Friday, authorities announced Sunday. The arrests, part of an intensified manhunt amid rising insecurity in the region, come as the state government offers a ₦10 million bounty for tips leading to the killers’ capture, underscoring the shockwaves rippling through Nigeria’s Christian community.
Fr. Eya, the 52-year-old parish priest of St. Charles Catholic Church in Eha-Ndiagu under the Nsukka Diocese, was shot multiple times by unidentified gunmen while driving back from Enugu Urban along the Eha-Ndiagu-Eha-Etiti Road on September 19, 2025. Eyewitnesses described the attack as targeted and swift, with assailants fleeing into nearby bushes, prompting immediate outcry from religious leaders who decried it as part of a pattern of violence against clergy in Nigeria’s volatile southeast. The priest, known for his community outreach and advocacy against local banditry, was pronounced dead on arrival at a nearby clinic, leaving his parishioners in mourning and the diocese reeling.
Enugu State Commissioner of Police CP Mamman Bitrus Giwa ordered the crackdown, deploying tactical teams from the Udenu Area Command for bush-combing operations and raids on suspected criminal hideouts. Police spokesperson DSP Daniel Ndukwe confirmed the detentions in a statement, noting that “incriminating exhibits” were recovered during the sweeps, though details remain under wraps. “We have arrested 38 suspects, and they are currently undergoing screening,” Ndukwe said, adding that investigators believe some are linked to the hit, with efforts focused on isolating the perpetrators. Giwa vowed to “leave no stone unturned,” commiserating with Eya’s family and the Catholic Church while suspecting the gunmen remain at large in the area.
The southeast, a hotbed of separatist agitation from groups like the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), has seen a surge in attacks on religious figures, with at least five priests targeted in Enugu alone since 2023, according to Catholic reports. Suspicions have fallen on Fulani herdsmen, nomadic herders long accused of clashing with farmers over land, though police have not officially named motives or suspects. This killing echoes the 2022 assassination of Fr. Emmanuel Uche in Anambra State and a wave of kidnappings that have prompted Vatican pleas for Nigerian government action. Enugu Governor Peter Mbah condemned the murder as “barbaric” and upped the ante with the bounty, urging residents to provide leads while boosting patrols.
Manhunt Intensifies Amid Broader Security Fears
The probe unfolds against a backdrop of escalating insecurity in Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation, where banditry, insurgency, and ethnic tensions have claimed over 2,000 lives this year, per human rights trackers. The Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Nigeria decried Eya’s death as a “callous act” in a joint statement, demanding federal intervention and linking it to unaddressed farmer-herder conflicts that have displaced thousands in the Middle Belt and south. “Clergy are not immune; we serve in the line of fire,” Bishop Denis Onyeogu of Nsukka told reporters, calling for ecumenical solidarity.
Public outrage has boiled over on social media, with #JusticeForFrEya trending on X, where users from Lagos to Abuja shared tributes and demands for accountability. Advocacy groups like the Justice, Development and Peace Commission urged non-violent protests, while IPOB denied involvement, blaming “government-backed herdsmen.” Police have cordoned off the crime scene and set up checkpoints, with Giwa hinting at possible collaborations with neighboring states.
As screening continues, the 38 detainees—whose identities and affiliations remain undisclosed—face potential charges ranging from murder to conspiracy. Enugu’s command has ramped up community policing, but critics argue deeper reforms, like addressing root causes of herder-farmer clashes, are needed beyond arrests.
