Nuns killed in Algeria

Nuns killed in Algeria

From Witness History by BBC World Service

May 4, 2026 · 10 min

About this episode

Sister Lourdes Migueles recounts her experiences during the Algerian civil conflict, including the tragic shooting of her fellow nuns.

In the early 1990s, Algeria was engulfed by a brutal civil conflict, as armed Islamist groups fought the state and civilians lived in fear. Foreigners were urged to leave, and many did. But Sister Lourdes Migueles, a Spanish Augustinian nun who had already spent decades serving in Algeria, chose to stay. As the violence worsened, religious figures also became targets. In October 1994, two of Sister Lourdes’s fellow nuns, Caridad Alvarez and Esther Paniagua, were shot dead near their convent as they returned from work. Sister Lourdes remembers hearing the gunshots, the panic in the street, and realising immediately that it was her fellow Sisters who had been attacked. Soon afterwards, she was ordered by her superiors to leave Algeria, something she says caused her deep pain, as though she had abandoned the country she loved. Years later, she returned to Algiers, where she still lives and works today, helping women and children. Sister Lourdes Migueles tells her story to Colm Flynn. Eye-witness accounts brought to life by archive. Witness History is for those fascinated by and curious about the past. We take you to the events that have shaped our world through the eyes of the…

People in this episode

Host: Colm Flynn

Guest: Sister Lourdes Migueles

Topics covered

  • Algerian civil conflict
  • religious figures
  • personal stories
  • violence
  • women's rights

Keywords

  • Algeria
  • civil conflict
  • nuns
  • Sister Lourdes
  • violence
  • personal account
  • history

Mentioned in this episode

Organizations: BBC World Service

Places: Algeria, Algiers

More episodes of Witness History

Explore listener stats, chart rankings, contacts and more on the Witness History podcast page.