Islamist militias more deadly than Boko Haram wage bloody jihad across Nigeira(graphic)

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Nigeria: Deadly nomad-versus-farmer conflict escalates

Roaming Fulani cattle herdsman accused of launching deadly raids against farming communities and targeting Christians.


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Haruna Mohammed, 16, herds his father's sheep on the weekends in Akwanga [Chika Oduah/Al Jazeera]
FAST FACTS
  • Thousands of people killed in fighting over past five years
  • Fulani cattle herdsmen roamed the region for centuries
  • Farmers say attacks have intensified since April
Akwanga, Nigeria - On the heels of an insurgency launched seven years ago by the armed group Boko Haram, Nigeria is embroiled in another conflict that has divided people across ethnic and religious lines with thousands killed over the past few years.

It's a conflict that 16-year-old Haruna Mohammed and his cow-herding family know all too well.

Not only are they at the centre of it, but they are also being blamed for it.

"They call us killers," he says. "But we don't kill. We are peaceful."

In a wide-open field in Akwanga, central Nigeria, Haruna guides his father's flock of nearly 2,000 cows to a stream in a forest. The cattle hustle past him in a mad dash for the cool, freshwater. Haruna touches them fondly. He knows each cow by name. He knows when each cow was born. He knows the lazy cows and he knows the playful ones. He knows which ones produce the best milk, and which ones produce the most dung.

"The cows are special to us Fulani," Haruna says. "They are part of our family."

Every weekend, Haruna walks several kilometres through pastures and roads with the cows as they chomp on grass.

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Bandit attacks displace hundreds of villagers in Nigeria

He says that he enjoys this chore. It's a break from his secondary school studies and a way for him to preserve his culture. His family hails from a generations-old cow-breeding tradition.

West Africa's cattle herders

The pastoral Fulani people - also called Peul, Fulbe, Fula and believed to be the world's largest semi-nomadic ethnic group - follow their cows today as they have done for centuries across the West African Sahel, from Senegal to central Africa.

In the past, farmers welcomed the seasonal migration of the Fulani and their cattle. The cows fertilised the farmers' fields with dung and the farmers reserved land for the cows to graze. It was somewhat of a mutual relationship, dented every now and then by conflicts, particularly when the cattle would trample the farmers' crops.

But today, the relationship between Fulani cattle-herders and farmers in Nigeria has taken a deadly turn.

Haruna and his family are viewed with suspicion.

As the last of the cows finish drinking water from the stream, a woman runs towards Haruna and his younger brothers. She shoos them away with her hands. Speaking Hausa, she tells the boys to get away from her field.

Haruna beckons his two younger brothers. They direct the cows towards another route.

In the past five years, fights over land and water between Fulani herders and farmers across Nigeria have left thousands of people dead. The farmers accuse the herdsmen of instigating the violence because the roaming herdsmen end up in communities where farmers have already settled for decades, even centuries.

"This is our ancestral land and we have been living here. Then these Fulani people come here once or twice a year with their cows and they are killing us," says Ngozi Ugwu.

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Ngozi Ugwu cries over the death of her brother, killed by suspected Fulani herdsmen who allegedly raided her community of Nimbo [Chika Oduah/Al Jazeera]
Dozens of people were killed in her town of Nimbo in southeastern Nigeria when masked gunmen descended in an early morning raid.

The residents blamed the Fulani herdsmen. Last month, Nigerian police officials released photos of the assailants.

"For years now, the Fulanis have been coming here to fight us and on April 29 they did their worst attack yet," she says in tears. She is consumed in a fit of rage that makes it difficult to understand what she's saying.






Her brother was among those killed in the April attack and she hasn't yet recovered from his death. Her neighbours fear she may now be mentally unstable.

  • She and others have seen horrendous killings allegedly committed by Fulani herdsmen.

    Pieces of bodies laid in a pile after the April raid. Chopped-off hands and severed feet aroused terror among the people in Nimbo.

    "They were slaughtered like bush meat," says John Orajiaka. He saw the assailants as they entered his church compound, shouting and shooting with Kalashnikov assault rifles. He said that he saw tesbih, prayer beads, dangling from their hands.

    Every few weeks, more Nigerian communities join the growing list of those attacked by suspected Fulani herdsmen: Agatu, Nimbo, Galadima, Obiaruku, Abraka, Tarka, Buruku, Ngodo and Biogbolo.

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    John Oriajaka sits amid the debris from a morning raid on his church by suspected Fulani herdsmen in Nimbo, southeastern Nigeria [Chika Oduah/Al Jazeera]
    A new brand of criminals tagged by security analysts as "Fulani militant herdsmen", has emerged to describe people travelling with large flocks of cows and raiding communities.

    The 2015 Global Terrorism Index reported that "Fulani militants" are the fourth most deadly terrorist group in the world, responsible for the deaths of 1,229 people in 2014 - up from 63 in 2013.

    "They now pose a serious threat to stability," the report says.

    In 2010, survivors of an incident that left 500 people dead in the central Nigerian state of Plateau said their attackers shouted at them in Fulani language, according to Human Rights Watch.

    This year, suspected herdsmen have killed more people in Nigeria than Boko Haram has, according to statistics from the Council on Foreign Relation's Nigeria Security Tracker.

    In May, exiled Nigerian human rights lawyer Emmanuel Ogebe testified before a Foreign Affairs Subcommittee of the US House of Representatives to tell American politicians that "the atrocities perpetrated by Muslim herdsmen of the Fulani tribe" is "a clear and present danger to national peace" for many Nigerians.

    Ogebe describes details of a fact-finding mission to the farming community of Agatu in central Nigeria where soldiers were deployed after suspected Fulani herdsmen allegedly killed about 300 Agatu residents in February. Corpses and bloodied pieces of bodies were left at the scene of the violent attack, which happened in a locality too remote for even local journalists to venture.

    "The sight was unnerving," Ogebe's claims in his testimony. "The tales of victims could not possibly capture the extent of the devastation. Travelling on end, mile after mile on bumpy dirt roads, there were no humans to be seen in village after burned down village."

    Nigeria: 5,000 rescued from Boko Haram in Borno

    Mohammed Husseini, a Fulani leader, explained that in Agatu, young men were stealing the Fulani's cows and that cattle theft is a crime that frequently goes unpunished.

    Husseini is the head of one of the state chapters of the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association. He claims that the constant thieving of Fulanis' cows puts the Fulani people at risk, and that they deserve to protect themselves.

    Apart from the cow thefts, analysts also attribute the rise in violence to climate change. The landscape of northern Nigeria - where many of the Fulani in Nigeria originate - is changing as desertification from the Sahara encroaches. Fulani cow herders are staying longer in the south, where the rainy season lasts longer and produces rich, dense greenery. But in the south, they are trespassing on farmers' lands.

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    A group of Fulani elders discuss accusations against their community in Akwanga, Nigeria [Chika Oduah/Al Jazeera]
    But not everyone supports this theory.

    "It's nonsense. It's just Western propaganda by people who don't know what is really happening in Nigeria," says a prominent Fulani politician, who asked to remain anonymous. He says that the rise in criminality among Fulani cattle-herders began in the 1980s, the same time that organised crime - drug trafficking and gang violence - increased across Nigeria.

    "Nigeria should be very alarmed. These Fulani boys are armed with dangerous weapons and they know how to use them. I am Fulani, so I know what is happening," he tells Al Jazeera. He is working behind the scenes with Fulani community leaders to find a solution to the criminality. He suggests that the perpetrators must be disarmed.

    The Nigerian government is yet to find an effective means of tackling arms proliferation, and even the Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari has admitted the free flow of arms trafficking that surged in the region after the fall of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi compounded Nigeria's security challenges.

    Furthermore, the ignition of religious hostilities has sparked a furious flame.

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    Paul Odiegwu says the Fulanis are targeting the Christian community [Chika Oduah/Al Jazeera]
    Religious tensions

    "The Fulanis are against Christians. They see us as slaves," says 51-year-old Paul Odiegwu. He is an elder at the church in Nimbo where most of the destruction took place during the recent assault.

    He is among many Nigerians who believe that this wave of violence by herdsmen is a continuation of the Fulani uprising of 1804. The historic raids, led by Sheikh Usman Dan Fodio, shaped the political and cultural landscape of what was to become the nation of Nigeria more than 100 years later.

    A cavalry of Fulani fighters - some on horseback, others on foot - took over communities across north and central Nigeria and parts of Cameroon with the aim of propagating a purer version of Islam.

    They subjected people from other ethnic groups as slaves, established an empire, dethroned local leaders, and set themselves up as the ruling aristocracy. Their rule continues in many communities today. Many of the most revered Muslim leaders in Nigeria are from Fulani families.

    This history is what many Nigerians fear is playing out again.

    Has the Nigerian president delivered on his promises?

    So communities in the predominantly Christian southeastern region are employing local defence strategies to protect themselves against the herdsmen.

    In the southeastern state of Abia, the governor congregated men of a vigilante group known as the Bakassi Boys to train youth to assist in community policing.

    At the federal government level, President Buhari - who is also a Fulani who owns many cows - has ordered a crackdown on herdsmen. After a backlash from outraged Nigerians who went on social media to complain about what they perceived as silence and ethnic bias from Buhari, the president came out to declare his administration will not tolerate violence and ordered security officials to "secure all communities under attack by herdsmen".

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    An elder Fulani man sits in his room just before going out to tend to his cows in Akwanga, central Nigeria [Chika Oduah/Al Jazeera]

  • But despite this order, attacks continue. Recently, a community in the southern state of Bayelsa reported an attack by herdsmen and concerns over a possible link between Fulani and Boko Haram. But details of ties are unclear.

    Ballama Mustapha, a civil society activist based in the northeastern city of Maiduguri, where Boko Haram began, says there are elements of Boko Haram within the herdsmen.

    "The issue is that some Fulani herdsmen have joined Boko Haram and also some Boko Haram members have stolen cows that belong to Fulani and are now moving with those cows disguising as Fulani," Mustapha tells Al Jazeera.

    Mike Ejiofor, a security analyst and former senior official at the Nigerian Department of State Security, says Boko Haram members have infiltrated Fulani communities in an attempt to flee Nigerian soldiers who have advanced on them.

    Nigeria: One year on, has Buhari lived up to promises?

    Nigeria's chief of army staff, Tukur Buratai, said last month that herdsmen might have ties with Boko Haram.

    Ejiofor and Mustapha fear the violence may be a more fatal security threat than Boko Haram because the herdsmen roam across the country.

    While escalating tensions threaten to destroy any semblance of national unity, Haruna is just trying to live a normal teenager's life. He watches locally produced Kannywood movies, but he says he prefers American action films. Rambo is his favourite.

    "Sylvester Stallone is cool," he says.

    Just before the mosquitoes come out in droves in the evening, Haruna walks the cows back home. He plays with his younger siblings. He lies out on the grass and listens to news on the radio, hoping to one day be a journalist.

    When his mother calls him, he goes inside to eat dinner. This night, it's soup made of moringa leaves scooped on top of white rice.

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    Fulani children of the nomadic cattle herdsmen in Akwanga [Chika Oduah/Al Jazeera]
 
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Graphic photos: Armed Fulani herdsmen attack Agatu LGA, Benue State, scores killed, village set ablaze


Several people were killed and many houses razed to the ground when suspected Fulani herdsmen attacked Okoloko in Agatu Local Government Area of Benue State on Tuesday.
According to reports, the heavily armed men who came in large numbers on life boats through the Benue river from Nasarawa and raided Akwu, Aila, Okoloko and other villages of Agatu.
Benue State All Progressives Congress (APC) in a statement released through its Media Director, Mr. Anthony Ikwulono, confirmed the attack and called on the state governor, Dr. Samuel Ortom, and his Deputy to make an unscheduled visit to the area to assess the situation for themselves and mobilize security to the area. It describes the attack as barbaric and unwarranted. Below is the statement:

The All Progressives Congress(APC), Benue State Chapter has in a strong term condemned attacks on the people of Okokolo in Agatu Local Government Area by Fulani Herdsmen setting the entire village ablaze.It’s barbaric, Unwarranted and uncalled for. We, therefore, call on the governor of Benue State, Samuel Ortom, and his deputy, Engineer Benson Abounu to pay an Unscheduled visit to the area to assess the damages caused by the herdsmen.We equally appeal to the governor to deploy extra security men to Agatu local government area.Okokolo is the ancestral home of Agbaduma and the hometown of the state director of publicity, Mr. John Ikwulono.
 
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Agatu Killings: Police IG deploys more officers; govt sets up dialogue in Abuja
March 24, 2016Evelyn Okakwu
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FILE PHOTO: Burnt house in Adagbo Village that was recently attacked by herdsmen In Agatu, Benue on Sunday (13/3/16) 2259/13/3/2016/HB/NAN


The Inspector General of Police, Solomon Arase, has deployed additional units of the police force to Agatu community in Benue State where hundreds of people were killed recently by suspected Fulani herdsmen.

A statement from the Public Relations Officer of the Force Head Quarters in Abuja, Olabisi Kolawole, said Mr. Arase assured of the government’s readiness to apprehend the culprits involved in the attack.

The statement said Mr. Arase visited the area and immediately deployed two additional units of mobile Police Force, while vehicles were also sent to aid operations in the area.

Mr. Arase described the killing of two police officers who were on official assignment in the area as brutal, and
warned that any person found to be involved in the killing would be made to face the law.

He said the Force was collaborating with relevant parties to prevent the spread of the crisis and said such killings would not be allowed to repeat in Agatu or elsewhere.

Mr. Arase commiserated with families of the deceased as well as the entire Agatu community. He asked for support from members of the community to unmask the perpetrators and sponsors of the crime.

In a similar vein, the Federal Government has convened a town hall meeting scheduled to hold in Abuja on Thursday, March 24, where members of Agatu and Fulani communities will dialogue to resolve the crisis.
 
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EXCLUSIVE: Why we struck in Agatu — Fulani herdsmen
March 19, 2016Emmanuel Mayah, Sani Tukur and Hassan Adebayo
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RELATED NEWS


What we are doing to end Agatu killings -- Nigerian ArmyMarch 19, 2016

SPECIAL REPORT: Inside Agatu killing field: blood on the streets, charred bodies everywhereMarch 18, 2016

Agatu people triggered crisis by killing 10,000 of our cattle – Fulani community leaderMarch 3, 2016

Fayose condemns Buhari's 'silence' on killings by herdsmenFebruary 28, 2016

Agatu Killings: Senate blames Boko Haram, not Fulani herdsmenMarch 9, 2016

A leader of the Fulani ethnic group has provided a detailed insight into why his people attacked the Agatu people of Benue, sacking several communities and killing hundreds.

In an exclusive interview with PREMIUM TIMES, Saleh Bayeri, the Interim National Secretary of Gan Allah Fulani Association, rose in defence of his kinsmen, saying the February bloody conflict in Benue was a reprisal attack by his people against the Agatus who he accused of killing, in 2013, a prominent Fulani man.

Gan Allah Fulani Association is an umbrella body of Fulani associations in Nigeria.

Mr. Bayeri said the killing of the man reverberated amongst every Fulani in West Africa.

He insisted that the Agatu farmers were aggressors shedding crocodile tears, and wondered why former Senate President, David Mark, was only just realising the meaning of genocide.

Mr. Mark, a one-time military governor of Niger State, was last week Friday attacked by suspected Fulani herdsmen who ambushed his convoy in Agatu where he had gone for an on-the-spot assessment of losses of lives and properties.

In February, 10 Agatu communities were razed and hundreds, including women, children and the elderly, were reportedly massacred by suspected Fulani herdsmen.

Mr. Mark, who represents the area in the Senate, had described the killings as genocide.

Although the Nigerian Senate last Wednesday blamed Boko Haram insurgents for the mass killings in Agatu, Mr. Bayeri said the attacks were orchestrated by Fulani herdsmen in revenge of the killing of one of their leaders by Agatu people three years ago.

The Fulani leader said about 20 Agatu and Tiv militia, on April 20, 2013, invaded the compound of one Shehu Abdullahi, killing him and carting away over 200 cows.

According to him the Police in the area “arrested four of the attackers carrying some of the meat on their motorcycle and they were taken to Naka police station”.

Mr. Bayeri also said 16 of the attackers abandoned their motorcycles and ran away and the police took the motorcycles to the station.

He said the police confirmed to Fulani leaders that they knew where 150 of the cows were kept and the “Divisional Police Officer promised to recover and return the cows, but up till today, nothing has happened,” Mr. Bayeri said.

The Fulani leader narrated how a dangerous point was reached in the crisis between the Agatu people and Fulani three days after the murder of Mr. Abdullahi and the stealing of his cows.

“A prominent Fulani leader, Ardo Madaki, was invited to the palace of the district head of the area on the grounds that a solution was being sought to the problem.

“However, the Agatu militia beheaded Ardo right in front of the district head.

“This action reverberated across all Fulani people in the whole of West Africa and the clamour for revenge began to grow strong. He comes from a very well respected clan and the Agatu sent the Fulani a chilling message with his murder,” he said.

“Till date, no action was taken, even by the village police station on this murder,” he said.

He also said the Fulani have records of how the Agatu killed over 300 of their people, adding, “but because we don’t have people in government or the media, no one said anything when genocide was being carried out against our people”.

Mr. Bayeri called on government to set up an independent judicial commission of inquiry to investigate the killings of the said 300 Fulani.
“We have a full inventory of all the Fulani people killed by Agatu and we would produce the evidence as long as the inquiry commission is not under the National Assembly

“We have no confidence in the national assembly because of the overriding influence of the former Senate President David Mark, who knew how the Fulani were being massacred and did nothing but use his influence to cover it up.

“The Sultan of Sokoto was in Benue state three times trying to find a solution to the problem, but David Mark never came once or even sent a representative

“Is it now that he knows the meaning of genocide. Where was he when over 300 Fulani were killed in his area?” he asked.

Benue lawmakers threaten self-help

Mr. Bayeri spoke to PREMIUM TIMES hours before members of the House of Representatives from Benue State addressed journalists in Abuja, condemning the Federal Government over the attacks on the Agatu communities.

The lawmakers threatened to resort to self-help should the Federal Government allow the attacks to fester.

“If the Federal Government does not stop its lukewarm attitude towards finding solution to the killings, we may be forced to mobilise our people to defend ourselves,” Emmanuel Orker-Jev, who led the lawmakers to the briefing,said.

Other lawmakers -Benjamin Wayo, Udende Memga, John Dyegh, Terseer Gbilla, Awwulu Ezekiel, Adamu Entonu, Christian Abah, Samson Okwu, Hembe Herman, dikkson Dominic – took turns to condemn the attacks and demanded action from the government.

On Friday, PREMIUM TIMES published a special report featuring horrifying details uncovered during a week-long investigation of the killing in Agatuland.

We reported how most of the communities had been destroyed and burnt down, while farmlands had been turned to grazing grounds for cattle.

But the human cost is even more devastating.

At the time our reporter visited, while many charred bodies still littered the deserted communities, living had become difficult for thousands who luckily escaped and were now taking refuge in neighbouring towns of Apa and Otukpo.

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There were complaints by the displaced persons that no help had come from the National Emergency Management Agency.

That point was reiterated by one of the lawmakers, Mr. Dominic, at Friday’s press briefing.

He recalled that the National Assembly passed a resolution asking that people who escaped attacks from Agatu be recognised as internally displaced persons to enable them to get adequate attention.

“But they are still not getting attention,” the lawmaker said.

READ OUR SPECIAL REPORTS ON THE AGATU KILLING BELOW
 
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Disbursing pictures of of the aftermath of an alleged Fulani jihad on innocent women and children(warning extremely graphic)

Disturbing Pictures Of Massacre In Agatu Communities, Benue State, Nigeria - TheSimonAtebaNews

Islam strikes again:demonic:

these Fufulani bush savages are worst than Isis and are most likely funded by the same hidden hands as the Boko Haram(looking at you Washington and Saudi Arabia):devil: Why are the Nigerian authorities allowing these Fulani jihadi gangs to pillage,kill and destroy all across Nigeria with impunity and why aren't the affected communities taking stronger measures to protect themselves since their government obviously doesn't care:mindblown:
 
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while i'm sure it's a few CIA/Gufl Arab funded mercenaries among the Fulani on this genocidal rampage these constant:demonic: stories from Nigeria on their alleged latest killing spree is not a good look:snoop:. i've read Fulani are known to take pride in being fierce warriors but it seems like they only Rambo while cutting up or shooting down unarmed Nigerian women/children from rival communities during sneak attacks in the wee hours/early morning while victims are sleeping:scust: Why don't the Fula Unclee Abdi fakkits hacking up African women/kids in Nigeria take all that fight to their sand cac masters in Mauritania whom still treat Fulani like stray dogs:aicmon:
 
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Disbursing pictures of of the aftermath of an alleged Fulani jihad on innocent women and children(warning extremely graphic)

Disturbing Pictures Of Massacre In Agatu Communities, Benue State, Nigeria - TheSimonAtebaNews

Islam strikes again:demonic:

these Fufulani bush savages are worst than Isis and are most likely funded by the same hidden hands as the Boko Haram(looking at you Washington and Saudi Arabia):devil: Why are the Nigerian authorities allowing these Fulani jihadi gangs to pillage,kill and destroy all across Nigeria with impunity and why aren't the affected communities taking stronger measures to protect themselves since their government obviously doesn't care:mindblown:
They can't stop them they're inept.
 
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The solution is barbed wire and a ban on nomadic grazing. However, Nigeria is now controlled by Fulani elites so this is unlikely to be widely adopted. A governor in the Yoruba-speaking state of Ekiti has banned nomadic cattle grazing.
nah the answer is the Nigerian state labeling the Fulani raiders with blood on their hands a terrorist group, using all resources available to hunt them down and through the law punish those responsible for the grave atrocities committed across the country...on that same note rival militias who may have targeted innocent Fula people caught up in the conflict should face similar consequences to bring justice to all and prove non one is above the law...these conflict is obviously much deeper than a land depute between cattle grazers and farmers considering similar massacres have been committed against Christian Nigerians in Northern states for years...between Boko Haram and these constant well coordinated Fulani attacks on Christian Nigerians i wouldn't be sup;rise if the Saudi or other Gufl countries areponsoring them both which is why Nigeria should also closely monitor and preferably expel all arabs and their establishments in the country
 
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They can't stop them they're inept.
i find that hard to believe considering all that oil the country is sitting on it's no like they lack currency to fund their army or police and i'm sure if those Fulani marauders were targeting Western diplomats as opposed to common Nigerian civilians the Nigerian state would have crushed them a long time ago :comeon:
 

Losttribe

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"Sauanaffe Tustunna

Islam strikes again:demonic:
If you believe this is about islam then you're a basic ass nikka.


Why are the Nigerian authorities allowing these Fulani jihadi gangs to pillage,kill and destroy all across Nigeria with impunity and why aren't the affected communities taking stronger measures to protect themselves since their government obviously doesn't care:mindblown:
:francis: why do you think?
 
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If you believe this is about islam then you're a basic ass nikka.



:francis: why do you think?
-being that these savages are likely funded by wealthy Saudi wahabist(among others) and targeting predominately Christian and non Muslim settelments I feel that's a fair assessment actually:yeshrug:

-i can't put my finger on it but if i had to guess corrupt Nigerian officials are indifferent to the lives of common less privleged Nigerians and some are probably payed to look the other way by the same foreign hands sponsoring the Fufulani mercenaries and Boko Haram terrorist destabilizing,destroying modern civilizations within and depopulating Nigeria
 

Losttribe

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-being that these savages are likely funded by wealthy Saudi wahabist(among others) and targeting predominately Christian and non Muslim settelments I feel that's a fair assessment actually:yeshrug:

-i can't put my finger on it but if i had to guess corrupt Nigerian officials are indifferent to the lives of common less privleged Nigerians and some are probably payed to look the other way by the same foreign hands sponsoring the Fufulani mercenaries and Boko Haram terrorist destabilizing,destroying modern civilizations within and depopulating Nigeria
Wahabi leaders don't practice islam... and they work with the West and Christian groups to conduct agendas
 
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Wahabi leaders don't practice islam... and they work with the West and Christian groups to conduct agendas
don't agree with the former but the later is exactly the point i've been getting at this thread....white supremacist leaders in the Middle East and West are using African terrorist groups such as the Fulani militias in Nigeria to destabilize, hold back and depopulate Africa
 
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