News
Dachomo, propaganda and the endless search for international sympathy
Dachomo, propaganda and the endless search for international sympathy
By: Zagazola Makama
So, Pastor Ezekiel Bwede Dachomo has once again informed the world that he is among the most targeted human beings in Nigeria. Not just targeted, but apparently so important that mysterious forces have allegedly placed rewards on his head.
One would have expected that a man carrying such a burden would require an army of security personnel, bulletproof convoys, safe houses and constant surveillance. Yet somehow, he continues to move about freely, attend events, create content, grant interviews, travel around and regularly appear in public without the dramatic security arrangements one would expect for a man supposedly hunted with a bounty on his head in the country.
Nigeria is a fascinating place. For years, we have heard the same script. Plateau is under siege. Every conflict is terrorism. Every criminal is part of a grand religious conspiracy. Every Fulani criminal is Boko Haram. Every bandit is ISWAP. Every local dispute is global jihad. They want to take over our land and chase all of us out.
The problem, however, is that facts have a stubborn habit of refusing to cooperate with propaganda. When the United States and its Nigerian allies intensified operations against actual Islamic terrorist organisations in the North-East groups with identifiable structures, commanders, camps and logistics networks, some of the professional conflict entrepreneurs and alarmists suddenly became uncomfortable and angry. Why? Because reality was interfering with a carefully cultivated narrative.
Dachomo had previously accused the National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu, of diverting the attention of President Donald Trump to carry out attacks on ISWAP instead of sending boots on the ground to protect Christians in the North-Central of Plateau.
Alex Birbir, too, did a podcast, saying the U.S. was not targeting those terrorising Christians. According to him, “Boko Haram were not the ones killing Christians; it is the Fulani terrorists.”
At one point, the argument seemed to be that the world was looking at the “wrong terrorists.” Apparently, dismantling ISWAP and Boko Haram was somehow a distraction from Plateau. Interesting.
But come to think of it, they are the ones who actually told the U.S. that those attacking them were Islamist terrorists. And even when they are asked, “Are they the same Islamic terrorists operating in the North-East?”, their responses often tactically switch to references about Christians being killed in Borno, Gwoza, Chibok and Adamawa, just to give the local crisis a global perspective.
If the problem in Plateau is exactly the same as ISWAP, then where are the terrorist enclaves? Where are the training camps? Where are the command structures? Where are the territories under occupation? Military planners around the world would certainly like to know.
The uncomfortable truth is that Plateau’s crisis is far more complicated than the simplistic religious story being sold abroad. Criminality, banditry, reprisals, communal tensions, land disputes and decades of mistrust all play a role. But complexity does not attract funding, headlines or international sympathy as effectively as a neatly packaged persecution narrative. And so the performance continues.
Every few months, the world is reminded that certain individuals like Dachomo are supposedly the most hunted people in Nigeria. Yet nobody seems to be hunting them. They grant interviews. They hold meetings. They issue statements. They travel freely. The alleged assassins must be the most incompetent assassins in modern history.
Perhaps the greatest danger facing some of these self-appointed spokespersons is not an invisible death squad. It is the possibility that people will eventually begin asking difficult questions.
Questions such as: If your message has been preached for years, why is Plateau not more peaceful? Why do the divisions keep deepening? Why does every tragedy become an opportunity to inflame hate instead of calm them?
This is because some people will never choose dialogue over hostility. The agenda is clear: to make sure certain ethnic groups are completely chased out of the land. This is why there is no simple path to peaceful resolution. And just like the former of Plateau rightly pointed out. The Problem of Plateau is the Leaders.
The people of Plateau deserve peace. What they do not deserve is an endless supply of fear, resentment and carefully manufactured victimhood. Because at some point, a narrative stops being a warning and starts becoming a business model. And that is a conversation many people would rather avoid.
For years, some actors have built influence around a singular narrative that portrays Plateau’s complex security challenges exclusively through a religious lens. Every attack is quickly framed as part of a grand Islamic religious conspiracy, while the criminal, communal, economic and retaliatory dimensions of the conflict receive little attention. This oversimplification has done more harm than good.
The tragedy of Plateau is that innocent people from different communities have suffered. Fulani Bandit have carried out attacks. Berom militia have carried out attacks. Thousands have been killed ok both sides.
Therefore, sustainable peace cannot emerge from narratives that continually divide citizens into permanent victims and permanent villains. Neither can it come from inflammatory rhetoric that hardens ethnic and religious fault lines. No forces in the world have immediate solutions to the plateau crises. The solutions lies within the very people.
The international community should also approach claims made by Dachomo with caution. Plateau’s security challenges are complex and require honest analysis and investigation, not emotional propaganda designed to attract sympathy or political capital.
Nigeria needs voices that build bridges, not voices that profit from division. The path forward is truth, dialogue and accountability, not fearmongering, exaggeration and endless narratives of siege.
The people of Plateau deserve solutions, not perpetual conflict marketed through carefully crafted stories of Christian genocide.
Dachomo, propaganda and the endless search for international sympathy
Military
Residents Cheer Troops as Operation FANSAN YAMMA Returns with Captured Terrorists’ Logistics in Zamfara
Residents Cheer Troops as Operation FANSAN YAMMA Returns with Captured Terrorists’ Logistics in Zamfara
By Zagazola Makama
Residents of Gummi town in Zamfara State on Thursday poured into the streets to celebrate troops of the Joint Task Force North West, Operation FANSAN YAMMA, following a major operational success against terrorists in the area.
Eyewitnesses said the jubilant crowd gathered as soldiers arrived in town with logistics recovered from terrorists after a successful counter-ambush operation that reportedly left more than 100 terrorists neutralised.
The recovered items, including eight motorcycles used by the armed groups for movement during attacks on communities, were transported on an Armoured Personnel Carrier (APC) to the Headquarters of Operation FANSAN YAMMA in Gummi.
Residents were seen cheering, waving at the troops and applauding their efforts as the convoy entered the military base, with many expressing appreciation for the soldiers’ courage and sacrifices in the ongoing fight against banditry in the North West.
Security sources told Zagazola Makama that the successful operation dealt a significant blow to the criminal networks operating in the area, disrupting their mobility and logistical capabilities.
The spontaneous celebration by residents is seen as a reflection of growing public confidence in the military’s sustained offensive against terrorists and bandits across Zamfara and neighbouring states.
Military authorities reaffirmed that Operation FANSAN YAMMA remains committed to sustaining offensive operations aimed at dismantling terrorist enclaves, denying criminal elements freedom of movement, and restoring lasting peace across the North West.
The Joint Task Force also acknowledged the continued support and actionable intelligence provided by residents, describing community cooperation as critical to the success of ongoing operations.
Residents Cheer Troops as Operation FANSAN YAMMA Returns with Captured Terrorists’ Logistics in Zamfara
News
WAHO, AfDB Hand Over 10 Ambulances, Medical Equipment to The Gambia in $3.4m Health System Boost
WAHO, AfDB Hand Over 10 Ambulances, Medical Equipment to The Gambia in $3.4m Health System Boost
By: Michael Mike
The Gambia – The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), through the West African Health Organization (WAHO), on Friday handed over 10 fully equipped four-wheel-drive ambulances and critical medical equipment to The Gambia in a major effort to strengthen the country’s emergency response capacity and bolster regional health security.
The intervention, financed by the African Development Bank (AfDB) under the COVID-19 Exceptional Emergency Project for Low-Income ECOWAS Member States, represents an investment of approximately $3.4 million in The Gambia out of the project’s overall $22.3 million regional budget.

The medical equipment includes oxygen concentrators, haemodialysis machines, X-ray machines, anaesthetic machines, patient monitors, diagnostic tools, biomedical engineering equipment and other critical supplies aimed at improving emergency, diagnostic and specialised healthcare services.
Speaking at the handover ceremony in Banjul, President of the ECOWAS Commission, Dr. Omar Alieu Touray, described the intervention as a landmark demonstration of regional solidarity, stressing that the investment extends beyond the COVID-19 pandemic to building resilient health systems capable of responding to future public health emergencies.
Touray, a Gambian, said returning home to witness the delivery of the project carried deep personal significance.

“It is with immense pride, profound emotion and a deep sense of honour that I stand before you today in my own home country. To return to my homeland and witness the tangible fruits of our regional cooperation is deeply humbling and inspiring,” he said.
He explained that WAHO, as a specialised institution of ECOWAS, was funded through the ECOWAS Community Levy paid by citizens across the region, adding that the project reflected what West African countries could achieve through collective action.
“When the COVID-19 pandemic struck, it exposed the vulnerabilities of our health systems, but it also ignited our collective resolve. We learned that we are indeed better and stronger together,” Touray stated.
According to him, the project has trained 1,427 health professionals, equipped 55 points of entry across participating countries and supplied thousands of sets of personal protective equipment.
He disclosed that The Gambia recorded a 100 per cent physical completion rate for all project interventions, while 852 health workers and stakeholders were trained between 2024 and 2025 in Integrated Disease Surveillance and Response (IDSR), Incident Management Systems, Infection Prevention and Control, among other critical areas.
The ECOWAS Commission President said the newly donated ambulances and equipment would significantly improve emergency medical services and expand access to life-saving healthcare, particularly for vulnerable communities.
“As we receive these materials today, let us remember that they represent more than just tools. They represent hope, resilience and our shared commitment to protecting the lives and dignity of every West African,” he said.
Receiving the equipment on behalf of President Adama Barrow, the Vice President of The Gambia, Mohammed Jallow described the donation as a direct response to critical gaps in healthcare delivery, especially in rural communities where transporting critically ill patients to health facilities remains a major challenge.
He said the ambulances would serve as “vehicles of hope” and improve responses to road traffic accidents, obstetric emergencies and infectious disease outbreaks.
The Vice President commended WAHO, the African Development Bank and the Government of Germany for their continued support to The Gambia’s health sector, noting that the intervention demonstrated the tangible benefits of regional cooperation.
“This support represents a significant investment in our health system and demonstrates that, through collective action, ECOWAS member states and their partners can deliver results that directly improve the lives of ordinary citizens,” he said.
He charged the Ministry of Health and healthcare workers to ensure proper maintenance and accountability in the management of the newly acquired assets.
“Please ensure that spare parts are available, maintenance schedules are strictly followed, and that these vehicles and medical equipment remain fully operational at all times,” he urged.
Earlier, The Gambia’s Minister of Health, Dr. Ahmadou Samateh. praised WAHO for what he described as years of unwavering support to the country’s health sector through capacity building, technical assistance and training programmes.
He noted that hardly a month passed without WAHO sponsoring Gambian health professionals for training within and outside the country, describing the organisation as one of the country’s most dependable health development partners.
The minister said the donation was unprecedented in the country’s history.
“To the best of my knowledge, we have never received such a donation of ambulances from any institution in this quantity at one time,” he said.
The ceremony, which also coincided with WAHO’s anniversary celebration, was attended by the Director-General of WAHO, Dr. Melchior Aïssi, representatives of the African Development Bank, the German Government, senior ECOWAS officials, members of the Gambian Cabinet, development partners and senior government officials.
The intervention is expected to strengthen The Gambia’s emergency medical response system while reinforcing ECOWAS’ broader strategy of building resilient regional health systems capable of responding to future disease outbreaks and other public health emergencies.
WAHO, AfDB Hand Over 10 Ambulances, Medical Equipment to The Gambia in $3.4m Health System Boost
News
Farmer killed by Fulani bandits in fresh Plateau attack as cycle of violence deepens
Farmer killed by Fulani bandits in fresh Plateau attack as cycle of violence deepens
By Zagazola Makama
A farmer has been killed in a fresh attack by yet-to-be-identified gunmen in Butura Gida village, Bokkos Local Government Area of Plateau State, in the latest incident pointing to the persistent cycle of violence between farming and herding communities.
Security sources told Zagazola Makama that the attack occurred at about 7:47 p.m. on Tuesday, July 8, prompting troops of Sector 5 of Operation Enduring peace to mobilise to the community after receiving a distress call.
On arrival, the troops found the victim’s lifeless body. The attackers had fled the scene before security personnel arrived, and no contact was made.
A manhunt has since been launched to identify and apprehend those responsible for the killing.
The latest incident came less than 24 hours after a 13-year-old herder, Mustapha Abdul Kadir, was found dead alongside four cattle in Mangu Local Government Area in what authorities suspected was an attack by armed militia.
Earlier the same day, two residents were also killed in Torok community in Riyom Local Government Area in an attack blamed on suspected Fulani bandits.
The succession of attacks illustrates the entrenched and increasingly vicious pattern of retaliatory violence that has continued to plague Plateau State.
Killings of farmers are often followed by attacks on herders, while attacks on herders frequently trigger reprisals against farming communities, creating a dangerous cycle that has claimed hundreds of lives and destroyed livelihoods over the years.
Despite sustained military deployments, peace meetings and community engagements, mistrust between the two groups remains deep, with criminal elements exploiting the fragile security situation to perpetrate violence.
Zagazola warn that unless perpetrators on all sides are brought to justice and local grievances addressed, the state risks remaining trapped in an endless cycle of revenge attacks.
Farmer killed by Fulani bandits in fresh Plateau attack as cycle of violence deepens
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