Nigeria’s Terrorist Government and
the People
By David Umahi
For Biafra Writers
24th February 2021
That the current Nigerian government is run by Fulani terrorists is no longer in doubt. In black
and white, Nigerian government has been hijacked by a Fulani cabal and is being used
judiciously as an instrument of terror to the indigenous people. Every intelligent body – local
and international – knows this for sure. How the indigenous peoples of Nigeria and the
international community will react to this anomaly and the threat it poses to mankind thus
becomes a pertinent question.
Many years ago, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu and his freedom-fighting outfit, Indigenous people of
Biafra, saw the handwriting on the wall and began to sound the drum of warning but like the
biblical Noah, they were ridiculed and ignored.
Kanu severally pointed out the 2001 barbaric declaration of Muhammadu Buhari, “I will
continue to show openly and inside me the total commitment to the Sharia movement that is
sweeping all over Nigeria. God willing, we will not stop the agitation for the total
implementation of the Sharia in the country”.
That Boko Haram nominated Buhari as their negotiator still wasn’t enough to ignite the
people’s consciousness. Buhari and his fellow irredentists called on their brothers in the military
to brace up for a war against Christians, and followed up on that by asking Muslims to vote for
Muslims.
Acting out the script, his goons obeyed him and went on rampage when he lost election in
2011, killing fellow Nigerians as if they were fowls. Today we see these foot soldiers in the
guise of cattle herders raping, kidnapping, killing, and renaming communities to reflect Fulani
colony while being escorted by the police and army.
We see government handing money to terrorists under the pretext of paying ransom, and even
recruiting them into the army with the claim they have repented.
While all these are going on, the police, army, navy and air force are hunting for Eastern
Security Network (ESN) – a security outfit set up by the people to protect them against Fulani
terrorists operating from the forests.
One then begins to wonder the path to safety. What will the people do? What will the
international community do? An injury to one is an injury to all.
Edited by Nelson Ofokar Yagazie
Publisher - Charles Opanwa