loyola llothta
â˜â˜â˜
CIA & Africom got Drone base in Niger
Which lie?damn what a crazy ass juelz
i've already pretty much dismantled everything you've said to me since the premise was built on a lie you made up to argue against yourself
CIA & Africom got Drone base in Niger
Which lie?
I'm gonna take the time to post the entire article of these bandits killing and robbing Nigerians and riding back across the borders of French controlled Niger and Chad. Worth the reading and evaluation time.
Katsina: The motorcycle bandits terrorising northern Nigeria
- Published
5 July 2020
By Nduka Orjinmo
BBC News, Nigeria
Motorcycle-riding armed bandits operating out of abandoned forest reserves are ransacking communities in Nigeria's north-west.
The groups are the latest to join Nigeria's lucrative kidnap for ransom industry, and are quite brazen in their operations.
In the last decade more than 8,000 people have been killed in the states of Kebbi, Sokoto, Niger and Zamfara, according to the International Crisis Group.
But recent attacks in the president's home state of Katsina, where more than 100 people were killed in attacks between April and June, have led to protests and calls for his resignation.
Vigilante groups have emerged in the north-west because of growing lawlessness
On two separate occasions the bandits targeted villagers who had received food handouts from the government during the coronavirus lockdown.
"They were about 200 on motorbikes, each bike rider carried a passenger and they all carried AK-47 guns," Bashir Kadisau, an eyewitness, told the BBC.
He said he climbed to the top of a tree when he saw the large number of motorcycle riders coming into Kadisau village, and saw the attackers loot shops, steal cattle and grain, and shoot people who were fleeing.
Climate change fuels conflict
The attacks are rooted in decades-long competition over resources between ethnic Fulani herders and farming communities.
Water scarcity has made it more difficult for Fulani pastoralists to graze their cattle
The herders are mostly nomadic and can be found on major highways and streets across the country herding their cattle, but they have become involved in deadly clashes with farmers in Nigeria's north-western and central states.
This is because these areas have suffered massive deforestation, due to the impact of the Sahara Desert spreading south, causing arable farming land to disappear and water to become scarce.
"The persistent clashes led to the formation of armed self-help groups, called vigilantes, by both sides for protection," security analyst Kabiru Adamu told the BBC.
'Kidnapping more lucrative than herding cows'
Armed groups within Fulani communities are being accused of resorting to criminality.
"The herders now see kidnapping and pillaging as more lucrative than the herding.
"The biggest cow would go for 200,000 naira but one kidnapping would fetch millions," Dr Adamu said.
IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
Image caption,
Herders sell their cattle in markets across Nigeria
Nigeria's Fulani herders deny the accusation.
The main Fulani cattle-breeders association, Miyetti Allah (Fulani for Thank You God), said they are the ones mostly affected by the activities of the bandits and that hundreds of their members have been kidnapped.
"Our cows have been rustled. The bandits are a bunch of criminals comprising all sorts of groups. We have lost 30% of cattle in Nigeria to different types of crises," Miyetti Allah's national secretary Baba Othman Ngelzarma told the BBC.
He said the attackers in Nigeria's north-west were "foreign herders from neighbouring countries".
WHEN DID I @ YOU AND SAY THAT1. Africans cant create an industrial hub for their raw commodities
2. I support French hegemony
Neither are positions I support and yet you lie because you really have no answers for what I ask.
I'm gonna take the time to post the entire article of these bandits killing and robbing Nigerians and riding back across the borders of French controlled Niger and Chad. Worth the reading and evaluation time.
Katsina: The motorcycle bandits terrorising northern Nigeria
- Published
5 July 2020
By Nduka Orjinmo
BBC News, Nigeria
Motorcycle-riding armed bandits operating out of abandoned forest reserves are ransacking communities in Nigeria's north-west.
The groups are the latest to join Nigeria's lucrative kidnap for ransom industry, and are quite brazen in their operations.
In the last decade more than 8,000 people have been killed in the states of Kebbi, Sokoto, Niger and Zamfara, according to the International Crisis Group.
But recent attacks in the president's home state of Katsina, where more than 100 people were killed in attacks between April and June, have led to protests and calls for his resignation.
Vigilante groups have emerged in the north-west because of growing lawlessness
On two separate occasions the bandits targeted villagers who had received food handouts from the government during the coronavirus lockdown.
"They were about 200 on motorbikes, each bike rider carried a passenger and they all carried AK-47 guns," Bashir Kadisau, an eyewitness, told the BBC.
He said he climbed to the top of a tree when he saw the large number of motorcycle riders coming into Kadisau village, and saw the attackers loot shops, steal cattle and grain, and shoot people who were fleeing.
Climate change fuels conflict
The attacks are rooted in decades-long competition over resources between ethnic Fulani herders and farming communities.
Water scarcity has made it more difficult for Fulani pastoralists to graze their cattle
The herders are mostly nomadic and can be found on major highways and streets across the country herding their cattle, but they have become involved in deadly clashes with farmers in Nigeria's north-western and central states.
This is because these areas have suffered massive deforestation, due to the impact of the Sahara Desert spreading south, causing arable farming land to disappear and water to become scarce.
"The persistent clashes led to the formation of armed self-help groups, called vigilantes, by both sides for protection," security analyst Kabiru Adamu told the BBC.
'Kidnapping more lucrative than herding cows'
Armed groups within Fulani communities are being accused of resorting to criminality.
"The herders now see kidnapping and pillaging as more lucrative than the herding.
"The biggest cow would go for 200,000 naira but one kidnapping would fetch millions," Dr Adamu said.
IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
Image caption,
Herders sell their cattle in markets across Nigeria
Nigeria's Fulani herders deny the accusation.
The main Fulani cattle-breeders association, Miyetti Allah (Fulani for Thank You God), said they are the ones mostly affected by the activities of the bandits and that hundreds of their members have been kidnapped.
"Our cows have been rustled. The bandits are a bunch of criminals comprising all sorts of groups. We have lost 30% of cattle in Nigeria to different types of crises," Miyetti Allah's national secretary Baba Othman Ngelzarma told the BBC.
He said the attackers in Nigeria's north-west were "foreign herders from neighbouring countries".
Nigeria's north-west, an area almost the size of the UK, borders Niger and criminal gangs criss-cross between the two countries, evading security.
'Herders seek revenge'
The borders are porous and the vast forest reserves in the border regions have been turned into operational bases for the bandits.
Police say the attacks in the north-west are being carried out by criminal gangs, as well as Fulani herdsmen.
"The Fulani herders suddenly realised that they now have arms to protect themselves. But they are not just protecting themselves, they are also going after those who wronged them in the past," Isah Gambo, police spokesman in Katsina state, told the BBC.
Inside Nigeria's kidnap crisis: A 2019 BBC Africa Eye investigation
Kidnapping for ransom is widespread in Nigeria, with victims forced to pay between $20 and $200,000 for their freedom.
At its height in 2017 and 2018, the major road connecting the capital Abuja in central Nigeria to Kaduna in the north-west had 10 kidnappings per day with 20 different groups operating on the route, the police head of a special unit fighting kidnappers, Abba Kyari, told the BBC.
Peace deal with bandits
The governor of Katsina state, Aminu Bello Masari, went into the forest hideout of the bandits last year, negotiating a deal that would see them escape prosecution in exchange for stopping the attacks.
IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
The conflict has caused much destruction in northern Nigeria
But he caused shock among many Nigerians when he appeared in a photo standing next to a bandit wielding an AK-47 rifle.
Businessman Nasif Ahmad, who had been kidnapped in Katsina only days before, condemned the governor for making the deal.
"How can a state government go into a deal with bandits who have no education, have no sympathy or faith and behave like animals," he said.
Mr Ahmad said he fought off the bandits after they abducted him, and spent the night in the forest.
"I felt very, very bad when I heard about the governor going into a deal with them," he told the BBC.
I guess someone forgot to tell them:Vietnam is not a US ally. Vietnam policy is based on neutrality and minding their own business. They cooperate with everyone; the US, China, Russia, India and Japan. Biggest commercial partner of Vietnam is China.
I guess someone forgot to tell them:
Vietnam Relations Are a Quiet U.S. Victory Already
There’s no need to empower hard-liners by a potentially provocative upgrade.foreignpolicy.com