Middle Belt Forum - Kaduna Branch

Middle Belt Forum - Kaduna Branch Middle Belt Forum - Kaduna Branch
Advocates for rights, welfare, and unity in Kaduna's diverse Middle Belt communities.

Promotes peace, justice, and development.

On 29 of December 2025, a bride, her friends and others were kidnapped during her bride shower on her wedding eve from K...
24/01/2026

On 29 of December 2025, a bride, her friends and others were kidnapped during her bride shower on her wedding eve from Kongo village in Kwaturu Ward, Kachia LGA of kaduna state.

I am sure you may never have seen this in any newspaper or TV but trust me it happened.

Imagine your sister or your bride to-be kidnapped on your wedding eve, how would you feel?

Imagine what she and her friends may be going through in the hands of terrorists who the government at all levels have failed to arrest and prosecute 💔💔💔💔

Kefas

THE MIDDLE BELT QUESTION: HISTORY, POWER, AND THE CURRENT REALITY.By: Dr. Pogu Bitrus.It has become imperative to respon...
11/01/2026

THE MIDDLE BELT QUESTION: HISTORY, POWER, AND THE CURRENT REALITY.
By: Dr. Pogu Bitrus.

It has become imperative to respond decisively to a mischievous and intellectually dishonest article circulating under the headline “The Manufactured Middle Belt: The Untold History, Foreign Backing and the Agenda to Fracture Northern Nigeria,” authored under the pseudonym Safyan Umar Yahaya. Far from being a work of history and of social concern, the piece is an alarmist pamphlet, animated by fear and bigotry, not facts, all aimed at delegitimising the rising social and political consciousness of the Middle Belt.

The anxiety beneath the essay is unmistakable. For over a century, certain ruling blocs have exploited the Middle Belt economically, subordinated it politically, and tried to diminish it culturally. Today, as the people of the region reclaims its history, pride and asserts its unity, anger and blackmail are the responses of the losers.

The central claim, that the Middle Belt is a recent political fabrication without historical roots, is not merely false; it is a deliberate distortion built on colonial convenience and selective amnesia.

WHAT THE MIDDLE BELT ACTUALLY IS.

The Middle Belt refers to the vast geographical and cultural zone inhabited by indigenous ethnic nationalities of the former Northern Region, now spanning 19 Northern states and the Federal Capital Territory, who were never conquered or were never largely ruled by the Sokoto Caliphate or the Kanem-Borno Empire prior to British colonisation.
Put plainly, the Middle Belt consists of the autochthonous peoples of Northern Nigeria who are neither Hausa, Fulani, nor Kanuri, and who historically existed outside the authority of Islamic caliphates, notwithstanding some pockets of Emirate enclaves among it. This is not opinion; it is an established historical fact.

Long before colonial rule, the Middle Belt was home to sovereign empires, kingdoms, chiefdoms, and complex stateless societies whose political systems predated the 19th-century jihads by centuries. Among the most prominent was the Kwararafa Confederacy, centred in the Gongola - Benue Valley. Between the 18th and 19th centuries, Kwararafa repeatedly defeated and humiliated Hausa city-states such as Kano and Zaria and even challenged Kanem-Borno, long before Usman dan Fodio’s jihad of 1804.

Other well-documented polities include the Igala Kingdom, Jukun states, Nupe Kingdom, and countless Tiv, Idoma, Gbagyi, Birom, Angas, Lelna, Bwatye, Eggon, and Goemai societies among hundreds of others - each with distinct political traditions, land tenure systems, and military histories. They had a common solidarity hinged on wading off Islamisation and genocidal slave raids.

COLONIAL CONQUEST AND FORCED SUBORDINATION.

The author inadvertently exposes his argument’s weakness when he ignores a crucial colonial reality: the British conquered the Muslim emirates with relative ease, largely by co-opting existing centralized hierarchies. In contrast, Middle Belt societies resisted British conquest fiercely.

British colonial records, by administrators such as Frederick Lugard and C.L. Temple, document prolonged military campaigns, punitive expeditions, and scorched-earth tactics used against Middle Belt communities from the early 1900s to the 1920s. This resistance is precisely why the British imposed Indirect Rule by force, subordinating Middle Belt peoples to Fulani and Kanuri emirs they had never known, accepted, or recognized.
That imposition,nnot foreign conspiracy, is the historical root of Middle Belt political consciousness.

THE COLONIAL FALLACY OF “NON-EXISTENCE”.

The article’s reliance on colonial maps and constitutions to argue that the Middle Belt did not exist before the 1940s is intellectually indefensible. Colonial documents recognized what served imperial administration, not indigenous reality. By that logic, countless African nations and identities would vanish simply because Europeans failed, or refused, to acknowledge them.
Even then, the claim is factually weak. The term “Middle Belt” appears descriptively in colonial correspondence as early as the first decade of the 20th century, used by administrators and missionaries to describe the non-emirate central zone of Northern Nigeria. The British deliberately refused to create a Middle Belt Region, not because it lacked coherence, but because doing so would weaken the numerical and political dominance of the Hausa-Fulani-Kanuri oligarchy that sustained Indirect Rule.
The agitation for recognition therefore predates independence; it merely became organized in the 1950s.

THE UMBC AND THE MYTH OF FOREIGN MANIPULATION.

The United Middle Belt Congress (UMBC) under Joseph Sarwuan Tarka did not invent the Middle Belt identity. It articulated long-standing grievances: land dispossession, political exclusion, cultural suppression, force labour, and religious discrimination.
To dismiss the UMBC as a tool of missionaries or foreign interests is not only false but insulting. Middle Belt people and leaders were among the most educated and politically sophisticated Nigerians of their generation, many trained in Britain and elite Nigerian institutions well before independence. They required no NGO or missionary to understand injustice they lived daily.

The historical record, petitions against Native Authority abuses, resistance to emirate taxation, land struggles, and demands for self-rule, is open to anyone willing to read honestly.

THE CONTEMPORARY MOMENT.

Today’s Middle Belt movement is neither separatist nor violent. It is a demand for recognition, equity, and freedom from an imposed Arewa identity that neither reflects its history nor aligns with its values. The Middle Belt does not deny the existence of Northern Nigeria; it rejects the falsehood that Northern Nigeria is synonymous with the Middle Belt.
What has long been marketed as “Northern unity” has, in truth, been a forced political marriage, sustained by coercion rather than consent.
Increasingly, the Middle Belt is stating what history has always known: this union was never voluntary!
If language must be blunt, then so be it, this relationship has often resembled political r**e, and the survivors have finally found their voice.

2027 AND THE PANIC OF DECLINING HEGEMONY.

The fear driving this revisionist essay is understandable. The once-boasted “monolithic Northern voting bloc” is fracturing. Demographics, political awareness, and historical truth are converging.
For the first time, Nigeria’s political establishment is confronting an uncomfortable reality: the Middle Belt is the decisive factor in national politics.

THE MIDDLE BELT, RELIGION, AND THE COLLAPSE OF OLD MYTHS.

A recurring propaganda tactic is to label the Middle Belt a “Bible Belt,” as though its political awakening is a sectarian religious project. This claim is demonstrably false. The Middle Belt has always been religiously plural, home to Christians, Muslims, and adherents of African traditional religions for centuries. Even institutionally, the Middle Belt Forum (MBF) disproves this caricature: its Board of Trustees and National Working Committee include Muslims, reflecting the region’s inclusive ethos. While it is true that the Middle Belt today is predominantly Christian, largely due to historical resistance to jihadist conquest and the voluntary embrace of Christianity, majority faith does not translate into religious extremism. The Middle Belt struggle is not about imposing religion; it is about ending political subjugation, cultural erasure, and systemic inequality. Reducing this legitimate quest to sectarianism is not analysis but propaganda.

Demise of the Hausa/Fulani Amalgam.

Equally misleading is the continued use of the term “Hausa-Fulani” as though it remains a coherent political or cultural bloc. Increasingly, Hausa intellectuals and opinion leaders reject this forced amalgam, insisting that there is Hausa land and there is the Middle Belt, but no natural or “Arewa” identity. The very terms “Northern Nigeria” and “Arewa” now irritate many enlightened Hausa voices who recognize them as tools historically used to sustain Fulani political dominance and economic exploitation. Recent events have further exposed this fracture: widespread violence by Fulani bandits against Hausa rural communities has shattered the illusion of a shared destiny. For decades, the Hausa masses were mobilized as demographic instruments against Middle Belt minorities; today, they are confronting the reality that they too have borne the costs of an unjust hierarchy. What is unfolding is not a Middle Belt conspiracy, but the collapse of an artificial political fiction. History, not agitation, has caught up with it.

Dr: Pogu Bitrus is the President of the Middle Belt Forum (MBF) and hails from Chibok, Southern Borno.

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27/12/2025

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US airstrikes: Terrorists, sponsors nationwide should be targeted – Middle Belt Forum

The Middle Belt Forum (MBF) has thrown its weight behind the Christmas Day airstrikes carried out by the United States military in Nigeria’s North-West, describing the action as timely and necessary in the fight against terrorism.

See more details in the comment

WHY ARE THEY SO SCARED AT THE MENTION OF MIDDLE BELT?Gora Albehu Dauda 13 December 2025They are feigning ignorance about...
22/12/2025

WHY ARE THEY SO SCARED AT THE MENTION OF MIDDLE BELT?

Gora Albehu Dauda
13 December 2025

They are feigning ignorance about the Middle Belt geographical space of Nigeria. Of course they know the Middle Belt, their pretences not withstanding. If they do not know where the Middle Belt is, then why are they always in a state of palpable fear at the very mention of the Middle Belt. One thing is very clear, the Middle Belt of Nigeria has existed in time and space and they know this to be true. The pretences aside, and their contrived blindness aside, WE shall help them register the Middle Belt of Nigeria in their brains.

The Social media space in the North of Nigeria has had to accommodate huge volume in of traffic on the subject matter of the Middle Belt. What is responsible for this state of affairs? The reason(s) cannot be too far fetched as it has to do with the potential unraveling of the old North into its component parts that were compelled into an unequal union by the Fulani settlers who the British colonialists helped to take over many of our lands. How can they now say they do not know where the Middle Belt is? Do they not understand that what was then called the Northern Region was more than 60 percent of Middle Belt territory?

How could they have forgotten so soon in the day about a Tiv man and one of the fighters for Nigeria's independence Joseph S Tarka and whose main preocupation was to secure the independence of the geographical Middle Belt on the platform of the United Middle Belt Congress? Have they also forgotten that the Fulani settler political party NPC fought with all its might and strengthened by British colonial interest made sure that the agitation by JS Tarka for the creation politically of a Middle Belt was defeated?

They may have forgotten that there is a subject called History. We remind them that History lives. Surely they will remember the Tiv riots or have they forgotten that too? If they remember, they will do well to also remember the reasons and or background to the riots. If they are able to recall the History very well, then they cannot but remember that the Middle Belt which they are now conveniently denying is alive and well. Ordinarily, responding to their denial would not have been necessary but because the records have to be updated and preserved, it became imperative to tell them to their faces that the Middle Belt is here to stay.

Through time, it was convenient for them to harvest our numbers as Middle Belters during all of the many fraudulent head counts of the past to find the strength they needed but only to disregard the very fact that the Middle Belt was deserving of the goodies and wealth the Northern Region of that time produced. They promoted their faith whilst also preventing the spread of other faiths, particularly the Christian faith. They have deployed all the means at their disposal to not only undermine or hinder the spread of Christian values, they have sought to acknowledge that there are Christian in the behemoth North.

Not surprising at all, because they have conveniently forgotten that it was largely Middle Belters who answered Gen Gowon's wartime call "To keep Nigeria One is a Task that Must be Done" of the Nigeria Civil War years. Sadly after the victory, elements from the feudal regime pulled the carpets from under the feet of those who won the victory and now, they cannot tell on the map of Nigetia where the Middle Belt is located. They can continue living in denial for all we care but the reality of the Middle Belt will come upon them much like a thief in the dead of night.

The truth remains that their elite know for a fact the place as well as relevance of the Middle Belt in the Nigerian equation and by extension that of Nigeria as a country . Those ranting the denial of the Middle Belt are inconsequential and blind as bats but the scales will soon be falling from their unclean eyes. Because of the dictum that "Impossible is Nothing", I thought that they should have been redying themselves for the reality that will in due time dawn on them. Some of the reasons they are so scared of what is to come to pass shortly includes the loss of votes, lands, cheap revenues they have been enjoying to sponsor terrorists, bandits as well as jihadists. Put in another way, they will no longer have others doing their dirty jobs. They are better adviced to face up to the imminent changes on the way. To God Be The Glory

A Dying "One North" and the Fulani Dilemma The so-called Northern Nigeria will be a very interesting political arena in ...
22/12/2025

A Dying "One North" and the Fulani Dilemma

The so-called Northern Nigeria will be a very interesting political arena in 2027 and beyond.
The ethnic nationalities of the Middle Belt scattered (in parts and whole of )13 States of the North plus the FCT, are more determined than ever to assert their political identity and choices—completely estranged from that of the Arewa North.
The agitation has never been this serious since 1947.

At the same time, the Hausawa, who form the traditional core of Arewa North, are insisting that “Arewa” does not exist.
They say they only recognize Hausaland, and they appear serious.

Increasingly, they are distancing themselves from the Fulani, whom many Hausa activists accuse of orchestrating a slow, deliberate pogrom against them, despite their shared Islamic faith.

They are mounting enlightenment campaigns encouraging their folks to use their numerical majority in Hausa land to elect only Hausa candidates in 2027 and after.
It's a full blown rebellion that is melting away the Hausa/Fulani amalgam.

Several exclusive Hausa movements are now agitating to reclaim ancestral thrones and territories from Fulani dominance.

So, the question becomes unavoidable: Where exactly is Fulani land in Nigeria?


- Luka Biniyat

Nigeria's Middle Belt: A Historical and Cultural Reality Beyond DenialDecember 13, 2024By Eld. Yusuf Solomon Danbaki, Ph...
22/12/2025

Nigeria's Middle Belt: A Historical and Cultural Reality Beyond Denial
December 13, 2024

By Eld. Yusuf Solomon Danbaki, PhD.
[email protected]

Mallam Aminu Ayama,

Thank you for your candid, albeit provocative, piece titled “Middle Belt or Bible Belt of Nigeria?” As a proud son of the Middle Belt, I refuse to be provoked beyond addressing the issues you raised. So, I write not to trade insults, but to engage directly with your arguments using history, facts, and the principles of self-determination upon which modern Nigeria was ostensibly built.

First, a point of agreement: you are correct that certain areas of what is called the Middle Belt can indeed be described as Nigeria’s “Bible Belt.” This is not an insult, but a factual historical outcome. This characterization holds because the region’s deep Christian identity is a direct consequence of its historical resistance to the 19th-century Usman dan Fodio Jihad that established the Sokoto Caliphate. While some areas fell under tributary influence, vast territories particularly the heartlands of present-day Plateau, Benue, Southern Kaduna, and parts of Taraba remained fiercely independent, defending their autonomy and traditional belief systems. When Christian missionaries arrived, these communities embraced Christianity not merely as a faith, but as a civilizational anchor a modernizing force that provided an alternative identity to the expanding political and cultural hegemony of the Caliphate. If the Muslim North has the sovereign right to implement Sharia and embrace its identity as a “Quranic State,” why should the historical choice of the Middle Belt to embrace and be defined by Christianity be deemed illegitimate or sinister? Both are expressions of cultural and historical self-determination.

However, and this is crucial, the Middle Belt is not a “Christian-only political sanctuary.” To frame it as such is a profound misrepresentation of its complex reality. The Middle Belt is, at its core, a coalition of historically marginalized ethnic nationalities, Tiv, Berom, Igala, Idoma, Nupe, Gbagyi, Jukun, Angas, Ham, Bajju and dozens more. It includes significant Muslim populations, such as the Nupe and Gbagyi in Niger and Kwara, who fiercely identify as Middle Belters, rejecting absorption into a homogenized “Hausa-Fulani” identity. Their grievance is not with Islam, but with a perceived feudal and political structure they associate with the old Caliphate system. The region is Nigeria’s quintessential mosaic, where religious coexistence, though strained, remains the lived experience in countless communities.

You dismiss the term “Middle Belt” as non-existent, citing the six geo-political zones. But these zones are themselves extra-constitutional political constructs, created in 1994, with no more legal standing than the regional identities they sought to manage. The “Middle Belt” as a socio-political concept predates and transcends the “North Central” tag. Its legitimacy is rooted in a struggle for recognition that was formally documented by the British colonial government itself.

I direct you to the Willink Commission Report of 1958. This official inquiry was established to address the fears of minority groups ahead of Independence. The Commission explicitly identified the peoples of the “Middle Belt” as “Middle Zone” and meticulously documented their legitimate fears of political, economic, and cultural domination by the majority groups of the Northern Region under the emirate system. They reported grievances over discrimination in administration, education, and representation. While the Commission did not recommend immediate state creation, its findings led to the inclusion of fundamental rights provisions in Nigeria’s Independence Constitution a direct acknowledgment that the problem was real.

Subsequent state creation, rather than solving this, has been a tool of deliberate fragmentation. From 1967 onward, state boundaries have repeatedly been drawn to split contiguous Middle Belt territories, diluting their collective political voice and preventing the consolidation of a cohesive regional bloc. Benue, Plateau, Nasarawa, Southern Kaduna and Taraba share deep cultural and historical ties, yet are administratively separated and often paired with areas of opposing political structures. This is not an accident of geography; it is demographic and political engineering. Yet, the identity persists. Why? Because administrative fiat cannot erase a people’s shared history, common grievances, and collective aspiration for dignity. We cannot be stopped because a people’s will to self-identify is inviolable.

Therefore, your alarmist vision of a “Bantu-like” enclave achieved through “mass ethnic cleansing” is a dangerous distraction. The core agitation of the Middle Belt is not for secession or religious apartheid. It is a cry for equity, security, and true federalism. It is a demand for a Nigeria where:

1. Security architectures respect local knowledge and protect all citizens equally.

2. Resources are shared fairly, and communities benefit from their own land.

3. Historical identities are recognized as part of our national tapestry, not denied or suppressed.

4. The right of association to call ourselves Middle Belters is as respected as the right of others to identify as Arewa, Oduduwa, or Biafra.

The tragedy of Plateau or Southern Kaduna is not a Christian project of expansion, but a failure of the Nigerian state to protect vulnerable communities from all forms of violence and to administer justice impartially. Turning this into a simplistic “Christian vs. Muslim” narrative serves only those who profit from division.

In conclusion, the Middle Belt is Nigeria’s historical conscience a reminder of the complex pre-colonial tapestry that the Jihad and colonialism attempted to simplify. It is both a Bible Belt, by virtue of its historical choice, and a multi-religious, multi-ethnic political community demanding its rightful place in a restructured, equitable federation.

Let us move beyond denial and caricature. The strength of Nigeria lies not in suppressing its diverse identities, but in weaving them into a union where no group fears domination. The Middle Belt is not going away. It is, and will remain, an integral part of the Nigerian story, that sink into your head please.

Defense Minister: “Wetin Musa No Go See for Gate”By Luka Biniyat The Minister of Defence, General Musa Gwabin Musa (rtd)...
22/12/2025

Defense Minister: “Wetin Musa No Go See for Gate”

By Luka Biniyat

The Minister of Defence, General Musa Gwabin Musa (rtd), has now settled down to duty after days of unanimous, tumultuous applause and ululation from virtually every section of Nigeria — including many who ordinarily loathe the government of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

The only tiny, largely unseen groups that may have despised his appointment are the same forces that General Musa — now simply called “Musa” by admirers — is expected to neutralise. Their silence is understandable.

In recent memory, no political appointee has been relieved of duty in a manner that triggered such spontaneous national disapproval and instantly elevated the individual to near-heroic status as did the retirement of General Christopher Musa as Chief of Defence Staff (CDS). It was strange, almost un-Nigerian. Our tradition is cynical joy when officials are removed. Banner headlines scream “SACKED!” Social media erupts in mockery.

But this was different.

Likewise, Nigerians are usually indifferent to new appointments. Beyond family members and political associates, the general public shrugs indifferently.
“Na him turn to chop,” is the common refrain.
Not so with the appointment of General Musa (rtd) as Minister of Defence.

“Musa” at the Gate of the Nation

Incidentally, Musa is the very name many Southerners derogatorily use for Hausa-speaking security guards (maigaurd) who man gates of offices and private homes, especially in the South.
“Wetin Musa no go see for gate?” is a familiar expression funnilyingly deployed when ‘musa’ encounters bizarre or dangerous situations that would bewilder even passersby.
Today, however, Musa has been handed a far humongous gate.
He is now saddled with guarding the entire gates of Africa’s most populous nation — nearly one million square kilometres of land, over 200 million souls, and assets running into hundreds of trillions of naira and most of a national pride.
With terrorists, bandits, and allied violent criminal networks refining their craft of public destruction daily — and with the United States breathing fire down President Tinubu’s neck over what it insists is a “Christian genocide”, — the task before Nigeria’s new ‘maiguard’ is nothing short of Herculean.

A Soldier Forged by Nearly Four Decades of War

Unlike many security political appointees who merely read security briefs, Musa has lived through war.
He spent 39 years in uniform, bearing arms, commanding troops, coordinating intelligence, and managing complex military bureaucracy at the apex level. He has seen battlefields, he has buried colleagues, knew traitors and saw bravery. His experience in combat, intelligence, and administration towers above that of the average Nigerian senior officer.

His Ministerial Uniform

In fact he has been so much in uniform that even in his retirement, he has designed his own uniform for his new job - a thick, bluish embroidered Hausas’ hula or cap, worn over a meticulously sewn jacket, marking his transition from combat fatigues to his ministerial uniform to show that he is still in another form of military service.
Yet, no matter the attire, Musa remains what he has always been — a man ranked exceptionally high in integrity, competence, professionalism, and patriotism. By any honest metric, he stands above every single member of the Tinubu cabinet today.
And therein lies the danger!

From Military Order to Political Treachery

For 39 years, Musa was a soldier.
He received orders and obeyed.
He issued orders and they were obeyed: Obedience. Discipline. Loyalty. Orderliness. These were the codes. These virtues defined his career.
Suddenly, he now sits in a Federal Executive Council populated largely by professional politicians — a class infamous for indiscipline, treachery, corruption, greed, fifth-column activities, and in many cases, glaring incompetence.
He is not merely a change of workplace. He is a collision of ethics and work culture.

A Brewing Conflict at the Apex of Security

The clearest fault line within Nigeria’s security architecture today is the conflicting worldview between General Musa on one side, and the National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu, alongside the Minister of State for Defence, Bello Matawalle, on the other. Two of them are Fulani.
While serving as CDS, Musa repeatedly insisted that banditry and terrorism are not issues for negotiation, and that appeasement only emboldens criminals.
In contrast, Ribadu and Matawalle — along with a former Defence Minister, Mohammed Badaru — actively encouraged Northern governors to hold so-called “peace meetings” in open town squares, where bandits arrived in hundreds, fully armed, speaking with brazen arrogance to terrified communities.
Nigerians do see it as peace-building. They consider it as a humiliation of the state.

Matawalle and the Burden of Damaging Allegations

Bello Matawalle is widely viewed as a sympathiser of bandits.
An old video resurfaced showing him defending bandits with the infamous line:
“Not all bandits are bad.”
One of his aides (Musa Mohammed Kamara) has openly affirmed that Matawalle maintained friendly relationships with notorious bandit leaders — some of them on the Nigerian military’s wanted list, with bounties on their heads. He affirmed taking hundreds of millions of Naira, to bandits leaders, on the instructions of Matawale; including gifts of vehicles and bulk purchases of cows stolen by the bandits among others.
Most damning is the case of Bello Turji, a vile serial murderer, kidnapper, extortionist, and arsonist, who recently appeared in a video confirming he met Matawalle at the Government House in Gusau — though denying he collected money.
Matawalle admits dealings with bandits but claims it was a government-wide consensus involving external stakeholders. He insists he is a victim of blackmail by political enemies.

The Question of Moral Rectitude

What baffles Nigerians and external observers alike is this:
How does a man so deeply entangled in allegations of cordial relationships with mass murders and spending hundreds of millions appeasing them while their victims got no justice nor relieve, retain the moral confidence to remain in office?
More troubling still is President Tinubu’s silence.
In functioning democracies, such an official would at least be asked to step aside — even under the polite fiction of “health reasons” commonly used by this administration — pending an independent investigation.
Instead, Matawalle has approached the courts to silence critics and media houses, attempting to bury scrutiny. But the call for his removal is only getting louder.
And this is one of the men General Musa must work with daily.

Ribadu and the Politics of Appeasement

Then there is the National Security Adviser.
Nuhu Ribadu once publicly downplayed the enormity of Nigeria’s crisis by telling the world that no part of Nigeria is under terrorist or bandit occupation — a statement contradicted by facts on the ground.
Ribadu is widely seen as the architect of the appeasement doctrine — pardons, negotiations, and alleged monetary incentives to armed groups.
Former Kaduna State Governor, Nasir el-Rufai, himself not a paragon of integrity, accused Ribadu of facilitating monthly payments to bandits to reduce killings and kidnappings. Ribadu has said that el-Rufai was lying.
Whether true or not, the public perception about that policy is corrosive.
Why is Ribadu still in office when insecurity has worsened and public confidence has collapsed? Can he forged a positive working partnership with the retired general in view of their glaring disagreements in the policy of pardon to terrorists?

An Undeclared War and an Unbalanced Command

Nigeria is, by all reasonable definitions, in an undeclared war. It is a war prosecuted largely by armed Fulani militias and allied terror networks spreading from the Sahel into Nigeria’s forests, farmlands, and highways. The grim news of killings, mass kidnapping and associated violence carried out by them daily is major news content these days.
With two Fulani men, already maligned by appeasement policies toward armed groups widely perceived as Fulani-dominated, sitting atop the security pyramid, Musa’s chances of success are structurally constrained

Why Musa Will Succeed — If Tinubu Acts

General Musa can succeed.
He has the experience.
He knows the terrain and knows all the Commanders who must defer to him, not only as the Minister of Defense, but as their professional senior.
He has moral authority to be trusted with public funds.
He has the professional clarity to prosecute a real war against terror.
But he cannot succeed alone.
President Tinubu must make a decisive choice: whether Nigeria’s security architecture will be governed by professional military logic or ethnic-political appeasement.
Removing Bello Matawalle, who appears barely literate, and Nuhu Ribadu is not an ethnic purge; it is a strategic reset. It will signal seriousness to the armed forces, restore public confidence, reassure victims, and tell terrorists that Nigeria is done negotiating its own demise.
With a unified command structure aligned to Musa’s doctrine of use of force and universal approved none-kinetic approach — not appeasement — Nigeria can begin to reclaim its gates.
And then, truly, we shall say:
Wetin Musa no go see for gate and e no deal with?

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