News
THIS ISSUES HAPPENED LAST WEEK AND WE KNOW THERE IS GOING TO BE RETALIATION”
THIS ISSUES HAPPENED LAST WEEK AND WE KNOW THERE IS GOING TO BE RETALIATION”
Those words, spoken by a Plateau State Government official, may be among the most uncomfortable truths uttered in the aftermath of the latest killings in Plateau State.
The statement immediately demands an honest examination of What exactly were the “issues” he was referring to?
For years, discussions about violence in Plateau have often been reduced to a simplistic narrative of victims and aggressors. Every fresh attack triggers outrage, condemnation, and demands for justice. Rightly so. Innocent lives are being lost, communities are being destroyed, and families are being plunged into grief. But can the crisis truly be understood if only one side of the story is told?
Everyone knows the identity of those often blamed for attacks on Berom communities. They are Fulani Bandits. The media reports it. Activists discuss it. Government officials condemn it. National attention follows. Yet there is another question that is rarely asked with the same urgency:
Who kills the Fulani victims whose deaths later become the justification for reprisals and revenge attacks? (Berom Militia)
This question is not asked to excuse criminality. It is not asked to justify retaliation. It is asked because every cycle of violence has a beginning, and every reprisal has a preceding event.
When livestock are attacked, when herders are ambushed, when isolated settlements are raided, or when innocent civilians from any community are killed, such incidents deserve the same attention, documentation, and outrage as every other attack.

But No, instead whenever they attacked herders or rustled their livestock, the crises reporters will then use their platforms to issue Threat Alert knowing fully well that reprisal may happened and push to security forces and asked them to defend the community from attack. Then you will hear that another attack has happened. Then the youths will gather to blame security agencies for not acting fast after alerting them.
The whole society will now come out to condemn the killings while remaining silent in the earlier attacks which trigger the retaliation. The justification they always give for killing herder or attacking livestock is that it is an act of self defense. But HOW?
As it is there is no hope to break the cycle of violence when the society only demands justice for one victim while ignoring the suffering of another, while refusing to acknowledge all the actors and all the victims involved.
The tragedy of Plateau is that too many people have become trapped in narratives of FALSEHOOD. One side sees only its dead. The other side sees only its own losses. In between lies the truth, a long chain of attacks, reprisals, counter-reprisals, and unresolved grievances that continue to consume innocent lives, while youths who receive dollars to push false Propaganda continue to smile to the banks at the detriment of the lives of their people.

The greatest disservice being done to Plateau today is not merely the violence itself. It is the refusal by some commentators, activists, and sections of the media to examine the full picture.
Peace cannot be built on selective memory. Justice cannot be built on selective reporting.
And reconciliation cannot be built on narratives that recognize only some victims while erasing others.
If Plateau is ever to escape this endless cycle of bloodshed, every killing must matter. Every victim must count. Every attack must be investigated. And every perpetrator, regardless of ethnicity, religion, or affiliation, must be held accountable.
A society that can predict retaliation before it happens is a society trapped in a cycle it has failed to confront honestly.
The question is no longer whether there will be another reprisal.The question is whether Plateau is finally prepared to acknowledge the full truth behind the violence before more innocent people pay the price.
THIS ISSUES HAPPENED LAST WEEK AND WE KNOW THERE IS GOING TO BE RETALIATION”
News
Centre lauds Kaduna Govt over life skills, gender education policies approval
Centre lauds Kaduna Govt over life skills, gender education policies approval
By Aisha Gambo
The Centre for Girls’ Education (CGE) has commended the Kaduna State Executive Council for approving the Kaduna State Life Skills Policy and the State Policy on Gender in Education (SPGE 2026–2030).
The Executive Director of the organisation, Habiba Mohammed, made this known in a statement issued on Wednesday in Kaduna.
She said the approval marked a transition from donor-supported, time-bound interventions to a sustainable, government-led framework for delivering life skills education and promoting gender equity in schools.
According to her, the Life Skills Policy will equip young people with the knowledge, skills, attitudes and values required to succeed in education, employment and life, while the Gender in Education Policy providzbves a framework to promote equity, inclusion, participation, retention, completion and improved learning outcomes.
“The approval moves life skills and gender equity from the margins of the classroom into the core of Kaduna State’s education system,” she said.
Mohammed said CGE contributed to the development and validation of the policies through its system-strengthening project supported by Co-Impact, OASIS Initiative and the Malala Fund, in collaboration with the Adolescent Girls Initiative for Learning and Empowerment (AGILE) and the Kaduna State Ministry of Education.
She said the policies built on more than 18 years of the organisation’s Safe Space model, which independent evaluations showed had helped reduce child marriage, increase school enrolment and delay early marriage.
According to her, the AGILE programme in Kaduna has reached more than 127,319 girls and 6,250 boys between the ages of 14 and 18, while over 1,400 female and male teachers have been trained as mentors.
She added that institutionalising the model through public policy would ensure that life skills education became a permanent component of the state’s education system.
Mohammed said the policies would address barriers to school access, retention and completion, particularly for girls and other vulnerable learners.
She added that they would also institutionalise life skills as a co-curricular programme, strengthen evidence-based decision-making across the state’s 23 local government areas and guarantee continuity beyond donor-funded programmes.
The executive director commended Gov. Uba Sani for providing the leadership that made the policy approval possible.
She also appreciated the Commissioner for Education, Prof. Abubakar Sani Sambo, the Kaduna State Ministry of Education, the AGILE State Project Implementation Unit, the World Bank and other stakeholders for their contributions to the process.
Mohammed reaffirmed CGE’s commitment to supporting the Kaduna State Government with technical assistance during the implementation phase, including teacher training, gender-responsive education sector budgeting and monitoring.
She said the ultimate goal was to ensure that every girl and boy in Kaduna State had the opportunity to learn, develop and thrive.
Centre lauds Kaduna Govt over life skills, gender education policies approval
News
Troops Kill Six ISWAP Fighters, Wound Seven in Failed Attack on Borno Military Base
Troops Kill Six ISWAP Fighters, Wound Seven in Failed Attack on Borno Military Base
By: Zagazola Makama
Six fighters of the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) were reportedly killed and seven others seriously wounded during a failed attack on a Forward Operating Base (FOB) at Logomani in Borno State, credible intelligence sources have disclosed.
The sources told Zagazola Makama that the terrorists launched the attack on the military position in the early hours of July 7 but suffered significant casualties after troops mounted a fierce resistance.
According to the intelligence assessment, the attackers had assembled at Garal before advancing on the military base.
Following the failed assault, surviving insurgents were reportedly seen regrouping at Chukun Gudu, where they buried six of their fighters killed during the encounter.
Among those reportedly buried was a senior fighter identified as Munzir, also known as Ba Alayi, who was said to be an indigene of Wulgo.
The development comes as troops of Operation HADIN KAI continue sustained clearance operations aimed at dismantling terrorist enclaves and disrupting insurgents’ logistics and mobility across the Lake Chad region.
Troops Kill Six ISWAP Fighters, Wound Seven in Failed Attack on Borno Military Base
Health
Cholera Outbreak Kills Nine ISWAP Terrorists in Timbuktu Triangle
Cholera Outbreak Kills Nine ISWAP Terrorists in Timbuktu Triangle
By: Zagazola Makama
A cholera outbreak has reportedly claimed the lives of nine fighters of the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) in the Timbuktu Triangle, a known terrorist stronghold in Borno State, intelligence sources have disclosed.
The sources told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that the outbreak had spread through the group’s enclaves, highlighting deteriorating sanitary conditions and limited access to medical care within the insurgents’ camps.
According to the intelligence, two additional ISWAP fighters infected with the disease were allegedly executed by fellow terrorists after attempts to manage their condition at Kimba village proved unsuccessful.
The sources said the development pointed to the worsening health conditions within the terrorist hideouts, where sustained military pressure has disrupted logistics, including access to medicines and treatment facilities.
The sources added that commanders had also been urged to intensify efforts to intercept medical supplies and pharmaceuticals intended for terrorist camps in order to further degrade ISWAP’s treatment capability and operational resilience.
The reported outbreak comes amid sustained offensives by troops of Operation HADIN KAI, who continue to target terrorist enclaves and logistics networks across the Lake Chad region in a bid to degrade the insurgents’ fighting capacity.
Cholera Outbreak Kills Nine ISWAP Terrorists in Timbuktu Triangle
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