18 November 1987: Established as Diocese of Ahiara from the Diocese of Owerri[2]
Appointment controversy 2012-2018
The clergy and laity of the diocese refused to accept the bishop Pope Benedict XVI had appointed in 2012 as their ordinary, Peter Ebere Okpaleke, because he was not of the Mbaise ethnic group or chosen from among the local priests.[3][4] Okpaleke was consecrated a bishop on 21 May 2013, but he was not installed in Ahiara.
On 8 June 2017, Pope Francis, after receiving a delegation from the Diocese, gave all the diocesan priests and deacons 30 days to personally write to the Vatican pledging obedience to the pope and accepting Okpaleke. Those who failed to write would be suspended a divinis, which would prohibit a priest or deacon from administering the sacraments, save for a priest hearing the confession of a person in danger of death, and would be removed from their posts. He had considered suppressing the diocese, but decided against that.[6] On 8 July, it was reported that while the letter of apology was sent, Okpalaeke's appointment was still rejected by the local priests who insisted that the Holy See was enforcing racial discrimination in the country by hiring outsider priests to become bishops.[7]
On 22 July 2017, Pope Francis agreed to respond through emissaries to the individual priests protesting Okpaleke's appointment.[8]
On 14 February 2018, Okpaleke submitted his resignation to Cardinal Fernando Filoni, Prefect of the Congregation for the Evangelisation of Peoples, and Archbishop Antonio Guido Filipazzi, Apostolic Nuncio to Nigeria. He wrote: "I do not think that my apostolate in a diocese where a group of priests and lay faithful are very ill disposed to have me in their midst would be effective."[9] On 19 February 2018, Pope Francis accepted Okpaleke's resignation[10] and on 5 March 2020 he appointed Okpaleke bishop of the newly created Diocese of Ekwulobia.[11][12] Okpaleke was installed in that position on 29 April.[13]
^"Bishop Victor Adibe Chikwe Dies at 72". Catholic Bishops Conference of Nigeria. 20 August 2011. Archived from the original on 27 June 2012. Retrieved 8 May 2020.