A January poll of thousands of people from ten countries featured Nigeria as the most religious nation and Britain as the most secular.The survey, conducted by the independent opinion research company ICM for the BBC What The World Thinks Of God program, included interviews with people from the U.S., Britain, Israel, India, South Korea, Indonesia, Nigeria, Russia, Mexico and Lebanon about their religious beliefs.According to the poll results, to be published in full Sunday, February 29, more than 90% of Nigerians believe in God, pray regularly and are willing to die for their belief.Believing in God, Indonesia and India followed with 97% and 92% respectively.People in Britain, Russia and South Korea showed lower levels of belief and religious activities than in other countries.All Nigerians interviewed said they believe in God, followed by 91% in the United States.In all, more than 80% of those polled said they believe in God or a higher power and agreed that such a belief made people better human beings.Some 71% of the Lebanese and Americans interviewed were willing to die for their God or their beliefs.Around 95% of Nigerians and 67% Americans said they pray regularly, while 29% of Israelis said they never prayed.Most SecularThe survey featured Britain as one of the most secular nations in the world, with levels of religious belief and activity far lower than in almost all other countries.It reveals that only 46% of Britons polled said they have always believed in God – 27% less than the average.Furthermore just 52% of British respondents believed God created the universe, compared to 85% in the USA, 83% in Mexico, 99% in Indonesia and 96% in Lebanon.The survey found that only 19% of those in Britain said they would die for their God/beliefs.Almost a third (29%) of people in the kingdom believe that the world would be a more peaceful place without beliefs in God.Across the ten countries, an average of 46% regularly attend a religious service but the figure was 21% in the UK, the second lowest behind Russia (7%).Around 25% of Britons said they never prayed.The number of British Muslims praying at mosques has outstripped the number of regular worshippers in the Church of England, the mother church of the Anglican communion, which covers 160 countries, the mass-circulation Sunday Times reported.According to figures compiled from government and academic sources, some 930,000 Muslims go to the mosque at least once a week against 916,000 Anglicans, said the paper.