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Herdsman found murdered in Niger community

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Herdsman found murdered in Niger community

By: Zagazola Makama

A herder identified as Yunusa Adamu was found gruesomely murdered in Babban-Rami village, Mashegu Local Government Area of Niger State, in the early hours of Sunday.

Zagazola Makama understands that the Village Head of Babban-Rami, Alhaji Umar Babban-Rami, who reported the incident, said the victim had been residing in the village to rear sheep.

According to sources , Adamu was discovered slaughtered by unidentified assailants at about 5:00 a.m. on June 22.

Authorities visited the scene shortly after receiving the report, and the body was evacuated to the General Hospital in Mashegu for autopsy after photographs were taken.

No arrest has been made yet, but investigation into the incident is ongoing.

Herdsman found murdered in Niger community

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Crime

Gunmen attack travellers on Nasarawa-Keffi Road, CCB staff missing

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Gunmen attack travellers on Nasarawa-Keffi Road, CCB staff missing

By: Zagazola Makama

Armed men suspected to be kidnappers attacked commuters along the Nasarawa-Keffi Road on Sunday evening, shooting sporadically and forcing vehicles to halt.

The incident occurred on Sunday at about 8:15 p.m. between Gunki and Marmara, where several vehicles were blocked by the attackers.

Two passengers, identified as Sunday Uche and Mohammed Babawuro, who were aboard a Toyota Hiace Bus with registration number FKY 728 ZA, were rescued after fleeing into nearby bushes along with other passengers who have since been accounted for.

However, concern mounts over the whereabouts of one Adoga Gupada Aruwa, believed to be a staff member of the Code of Conduct Bureau. Aruwa was reportedly driving a Toyota Highlander which was found at the scene with a bullet hole on its engine compartment but no blood stains.

Search and rescue operations are ongoing to locate the missing occupant Authorities have urged residents with useful information to come forward.

Gunmen attack travellers on Nasarawa-Keffi Road, CCB staff missing

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Security team recovers rifle, ammunition from fleeing passenger in Kogi

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Security team recovers rifle, ammunition from fleeing passenger in Kogi

By: Zagazola Makama

A patrol team operating along the Okene-Auchi Road in Kogi State has recovered a submachine gun, ammunition, and other items from a fleeing passenger during a routine stop-and-search operation.

Zagazola learnt that the incident occurred on June 22 at about 1:08 p.m., when officers from Okene Division intercepted a Nissan ash-coloured vehicle.

The vehicle, which was en route to Auchi, Edo State, had five passengers on board. Upon ordering all occupants to disembark for a search, one of the passengers suddenly bolted into the nearby forest. Despite a hot pursuit, the suspect managed to escape into the thick bush.

A search of the suspect’s abandoned bag revealed a cache of alarming items, including one SMG rifle with breach number 5197, one magazine, 28 rounds of 5.6mm live ammunition, one G3 live round, a black T-shirt, two tied rosaries, three phone chargers, an Oraimo power bank, charms, and a pair of black sandals.

Security personnel have since launched a thorough combing of the forest in a bid to apprehend the fleeing suspect.

Security team recovers rifle, ammunition from fleeing passenger in Kogi

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20 Fulani men killed and over 200 cattle either shot or maimed as Circle of violence deepens in North Central Nigeria

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20 Fulani men killed and over 200 cattle either shot or maimed as Circle of violence deepens in North Central Nigeria

By: Zagazola Makama

The escalating cycle of violence in Nigeria’s North Central region has taken a disturbing turn, with recent attacks revealing a deepening ethno-communal divide that threatens the fragile peace of the zone.

While widespread attention has been given to recent heinous mass killings of over 100 victims in Tiv-dominated areas, fresh intelligence and local sources reveal that a silent wave of retaliatory violence targeting none violent Fulani communities is gaining momentum with little or no state response.

From June 21 to 22, no fewer than 20 Fulani men were reportedly killed and over 200 cattle either shot or maimed in parts of Benue State, particularly in the southern axis of Makurdi, allegedly by armed Tiv ethnic militias. Displaced Fulani survivors, along with scattered cattle, are said to have fled into surrounding forests or crossed into nearby states including Nasarawa and Plateau.

Zagazola Makama gathered from credible sources that the targeted killings are part of the move by armed local militia to forcefully evict Fulani communities from Benue and consolidate ethnic control of rural territories. The same sources allege that some local politicians, community elders and traditional rulers have been quietly supporting this campaign by arming militias and enlisting the assistance of retired and serving security personnel.

“These attacks are not spontaneous. There is coordination and a clear agenda to arm one side while portraying the conflict as a one-sided aggression,” Most of the people just consider every Fulani person as a bandits including their cows,”a senior security official, who pleaded anonymity, said.

The same weekend, in Mangu Local Government Area of Plateau State, 12 persons, mostly women and children were killed in another tragic episode of communal reprisal. They were passengers on an 18-seater bus from the Basawa community in Zaria, Kaduna State, en route to a wedding in Quan’an Pan LGA. The victims reportedly lost their way and sought directions before being attacked and killed. The vehicle was set ablaze, with some victims burnt inside.

The North Central states including Benue, Plateau, Nasarawa, Taraba, Gombe, Bauchi as
Well as Sokoto, Zamfara and Katsina in the North West, have become a flashpoint of what analysts describe as a complex, multi-layered ethno-communal and ethno-religious conflict, primarily between sedentary farming communities and nomadic herders, most of them Fulani. While in the North West, the same pattern of attacks is currently occurring between the Fulani and the Hausa where the local militia known as Askarawa are defending their localities against incursions of the violent Fulani attackers.

Each side continues to nurse deep-seated grievances and sees attacks whether on villages or on herds as defensive or retaliatory. This entrenched mistrust is fuelling the local arms race, with both communities reportedly stockpiling small arms and light weapons (SALWs) in preparation for either defense or revenge.

The situation is increasingly being exploited by transnational jihadist networks. The al-Qaeda-linked Katiba Macina, a brigade of the Jama’a Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM), has reportedly made victimisation of Fulani communities a key ideological recruitment tool. This has also driven many disenchanted Fulani youths already victims of communal violence into the arms of extremist groups spreading from Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger into Nigeria’s North.

The failure to address the killings of none violent Fulani people with the same urgency as attacks on farming communities is creating a perception of state complicity or bias. This imbalance in response is dangerous. Despite the gravity of the unfolding crisis, there appears to be a deafening silence from state governments and other response agencies regarding attacks on Fulani communities. This inaction is fueling suspicion and resentment, further stoking the flames of mutual distrust, more attacks and hostility inform of revenge.

We called for urgent government intervention not only through security deployments but also through a public denunciation of all forms of violence regardless of the ethnic identity of victims or perpetrators.

We also advise the identification and arrest of known sponsors of local militias, including politicians and traditional leaders reportedly using public influence to deepen the divide. Such steps, are necessary to break the cycle of violence and restore confidence in government’s neutrality.

As it stands, the North Central region teeters dangerously on the edge of widespread sectarian escalation, with the twin threats of community rearmament and external jihadist infiltration converging in a volatile mix.

Unless urgent and balanced action is taken to address the grievances of all affected communities, Nigeria risks sliding further into a conflict that will be far more difficult and costlier to contain.

20 Fulani men killed and over 200 cattle either shot or maimed as Circle of violence deepens in North Central Nigeria

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