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“fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi - Politics - Nairaland

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“fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by DMayor101: 5:15am On Jun 06, 2021
Saturday, June 5, 2021
“Fulanization” of the North by the South
By Farooq A. Kperogi

Twitter: @farooqkperogi

Fears of “Fulani domination” have endured since Nigeria’s founding but, more than ever before, there is now an insanely unhealthy obsession with the Fulani in Nigeria’s South. The Fulani are not just routinely reviled with genocidal rhetorical venom, all manner of devious, supernormal political power is ascribed to them.

In the service of the reigning monomania about the Fulani, Northern Muslims, irrespective of their ethnicity, are now labeled “Fulani.” It’s worse if they are also beneficiaries of “juicy” political appointments in the Buhari regime.


Former Chief of Army Staff Tukur Buratai, for example, was habitually called “Fulani” even though he is Babur from southern Borno, a good portion of whom are Christians. The late Abba Kyari was called “Fulani” even though he was Shuwa (but linguistically and culturally Kanuri) from Borno.

When Muhammad Mamman Nami replaced Babatunde Fowler as the boss of the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), many people in the South said Nami was “Fulani.” But Nami is Nupe from Niger State, and Nupe people are linguistically, historically, and geographically closer to Yoruba people than they are to Fulani or Hausa people.

There is a list doing the rounds on social media of supposed “Fulani” people who are holding strategic positions in Buhari’s government, but most of the people on the list are merely northern Muslims who are neither ethnically nor culturally Fulani. Take Nigeria Customs Service boss Hammed Ali, for example, who appears on the list. He is neither Fulani nor even Hausa. He is from the Jarawa ethnic group from Dass in Bauchi State.


Nigerian Television Authority's boss, Yakubu Ibn Mohammed, is also on the list of “Fulani” appointees of strategic government agencies, but he is ethnically Jukun from Taraba State who grew up in Plateau State.

NNPC boss Mele Kyari has also been assigned a “Fulani” ethnicity even though he is a straight-up Kanuri man from Borno.

The only linguistically and culturally Fulani people on the list are FCT minister Mohammed Musa Bello and UBEC boss Hammed Bobboyi who are both from Adamawa State.

A reporter from the South recently interviewed me for a personality profile, and although one of the issues we discussed during the interview was the robust diversity of northern identities and how people mistake me for Fulani, Hausa, “Hausa-Fulani” or Nupe even though I am actually Baatonu from Kwara State, he still went ahead and described me as “Fulani” in his story. This shows how our preconceptions can sometimes distort our perceptions.

I corrected his unintentional mischaracterization of my ethnicity because he was kind enough to let me have a pre-publication readback of his story.

In other words, the South is relentlessly rhetorically Fulanizing the North, particularly the Muslim North, just to fertilize and sustain a simplistic narrative of superhuman Fulani domination. One of my Fulani friends from Adamawa by the name of Idirisu Alkali tells me he is often simultaneously amused and flattered by the prodigious capacities that southerners endue on his people.

The Fulani are now lionized in the South as the lifeblood of the North and the sole designers of all that is ill with Nigeria. But at the core of this sociologically impoverished monomaniacal fixation with the Fulani is a deep-seated but unacknowledged inferiority complex, which is fully realized in the tendency to describe as “Fulani slave” anyone who expresses opinions that depart from the forced and false consensus of the Fulaniphobes in the South.

Since only “masters” can have “slaves,” people who call others “Fulani slaves” have clearly accepted the Fulani as “masters,” indicating that they have also internalized their own inferiority before the Fulani.

But the truth is that the Fulani are just as human as anyone else. They are not a stagnant, undifferentiated, unthinking human monolith with no dissensions. They have the same fears, anxieties, and pains as anybody else. They have both good and bad people like other groups. There’s no conspirative conclave where Fulani people meet and plot to dominate everyone else. They battle disunity within their ranks like all ethnic groups. In fact, like the Igbo, they agonize over the progressive erosion of their language and culture in much of Northern Nigeria.

Muhammadu Buhari on whose account the Fulani are ceaselessly dehumanized and vituperated is, in fact, not culturally or linguistically Fulani. In other words, although he traces patrilineal descent from the Fulani, he doesn’t understand or speak Fulfulde (as the language of the Fulani is called) and has no experience with Fulani culture.

Buhari’s father, Adamu Bafallaje, who was an ardo (as Fulani community elders are called), died in his real hometown of Dumurkul in the Daura Emirate of Katsina State when Buhari wasn’t old enough to know him, so Buhari was brought up by his maternal relatives in Daura. His maternal relatives are ethnically Kanuri people who are nonetheless culturally and linguistically Hausa.

As Mamman Daura’s daughter, Fatima Daura, wrote on the occasion of her father’s 80th birthday, Mamman Daura is Kanuri. The family’s forebears migrated from Borno to a town in what is now Niger Republic and finally to Daura. Note that Mamman Daura’s father, Dauda Daura, shares the same mother (but different fathers) with Buhari. So Buhari’s mother, Hajia Zulaiha, was Kanuri.

Not having grown up with his father and knowing next to nothing about the Fulani, Buhari idealized not just his absent Fulani father but the Fulani people. This is a well-known psychological phenomenon that is encapsulated in the folk wisdom that says, “absence makes the heart grow fonder.” Barack Obama, for instance, idealized his absent Kenyan father—and his Luo people— with an intensity he would never have had if he’d grown up with him.

Buhari’s idealization of his absent Fulani father inspires an exaggerated identification with the Fulani in ways that alienate others and expose innocent Fulani people to unjustified animosity. That’s why I called him the “single greatest threat to the Fulani” in a July 6, 2019 column.

I also pointed out in a January 12, 2019 column titled "Miyetti Allah, Presidential Endorsement and Politics of Fulani Identity" that “People who are on the edge of an identity tend to be more exaggeratedly aggressive in their assertion of the identity than those who are—or see themselves as being—in the mainstream of the identity.

“For instance, when there was a butcherly communal turmoil that pitted Bororo Fulani cattle herders against Yoruba farmers in the Oke-Ogun area of northern Oyo State in October 2000, Buhari led a group of ‘Fulani’ northerners to Ibadan to meet with the late Governor Lam Adesina where he told Adesina, among other things, ‘your people are killing my people.’ A Fulani person from the northeast is unlikely to say that.”

Nothing in what I’ve said is intended to mitigate the injustice of Buhari’s preferentialist style of governance. I started calling out what I called the “undisguised Arewacentricity” in Buhari’s appointment since 2015 when most people were scared to criticize the regime (read, for instance, my September 5, 2015 column titled “Buhari is Losing the Symbolic War”), but to put the entire moral weight of his wrongheaded choices on the Fulani and proceed to demonize them without let is both reprehensible and unconscionable.

There’s no denying that northern Muslim elites have benefitted disproportionately in choice appointments in this regime, but “northern Muslim elite” isn’t synonymous with “Fulani.”

An honest, empathetic role play would probably help. Imagine being from an ethnic group that’s perpetually slandered, maligned, reviled, and vilified as a national pastime because you share ethnic identity with someone—or some people—whose boneheaded policies smolder you like they do your traducers. How would you feel?

Demonizing people based on invariable attributes that are incidental to their humanity, such as their ethnicity or race, is akin to condemning them even before they were born. Malcolm X once called that the worst crime that can ever be committed. Let the toxic, hateful ignorance stop already!


Source: https://www.farooqkperogi.com/2021/06/fulanization-of-north-by-south.html?m=1

7 Likes

Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by Ammishaddai: 5:25am On Jun 06, 2021
This man is yarning dust. All members of Buhari's cabinet are northern Muslims and why is it like that? These are the silent questions this man should asking instead of publishing rubbish.

6 Likes

Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by JohnSin97: 5:38am On Jun 06, 2021
Farooq is being half smart....the intercultural and intribal relationships and marriages have made core northern tribes into one single identity known as hausa/fulani. An ijebu man will tell you proudly that he is ijebu, but most people can't tell the difference between him and an Ibadan man.

8 Likes

Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by Karlovych: 5:44am On Jun 06, 2021
grin grin As an Owo mi da moozlem I endorse this message
Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by Oxb90: 5:53am On Jun 06, 2021
All these na grammar. And I don't have time for too much English this Sunday morning
Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by Upton: 5:54am On Jun 06, 2021
Farooq
Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by Fahdiga1: 6:06am On Jun 06, 2021
They all have one thing in common, killing and destruction
Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by butterfly777(m): 6:08am On Jun 06, 2021
Even the dumb already knows the Fulanis evil agenda.

2 Likes

Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by Davinity: 6:12am On Jun 06, 2021
What kind of stupid write up is this? Is it normal to have all the juicy appointments go to people from a particular region without taking into cognisance our inherent ethnic diversity?

1 Like

Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by Nobody: 6:19am On Jun 06, 2021
Good article, but it won't change minds at all as evidenced by the above comments

Personally i think that Buhari has run a bad government. But far be it from me to blame his entire tribe for the failures of his government especially as the same tribe is suffering too under his bad governance.

Nigeria has problems because we run a share the national cake economy , not because of the Fulanis, ibos, Yorubas or any other tribe.

1 Like 2 Shares

Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by chrisxxx(m): 6:23am On Jun 06, 2021
Oh! Nnamdi Kanu is half-smart. He knows Buhari can't speak his native Fulfude and he used this against him by challenging him to appear on TV to speak Fulfude if he is truly Buhari.
Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by Jesuschristus: 6:23am On Jun 06, 2021
Summary pls
Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by zeuss: 6:34am On Jun 06, 2021
He would do beta to ask his brothers to quit kidnapping, armed robbery, rape and murder of farmers, women and children

1 Like

Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by Iykoto86(m): 6:55am On Jun 06, 2021
DMayor101:
Saturday, June 5, 2021
“Fulanization” of the North by the South
By Farooq A. Kperogi

Twitter: @farooqkperogi

Fears of “Fulani domination” have endured since Nigeria’s founding but, more than ever before, there is now an insanely unhealthy obsession with the Fulani in Nigeria’s South. The Fulani are not just routinely reviled with genocidal rhetorical venom, all manner of devious, supernormal political power is ascribed to them.

In the service of the reigning monomania about the Fulani, Northern Muslims, irrespective of their ethnicity, are now labeled “Fulani.” It’s worse if they are also beneficiaries of “juicy” political appointments in the Buhari regime.


Former Chief of Army Staff Tukur Buratai, for example, was habitually called “Fulani” even though he is Babur from southern Borno, a good portion of whom are Christians. The late Abba Kyari was called “Fulani” even though he was Shuwa (but linguistically and culturally Kanuri) from Borno.

When Muhammad Mamman Nami replaced Babatunde Fowler as the boss of the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), many people in the South said Nami was “Fulani.” But Nami is Nupe from Niger State, and Nupe people are linguistically, historically, and geographically closer to Yoruba people than they are to Fulani or Hausa people.

There is a list doing the rounds on social media of supposed “Fulani” people who are holding strategic positions in Buhari’s government, but most of the people on the list are merely northern Muslims who are neither ethnically nor culturally Fulani. Take Nigeria Customs Service boss Hammed Ali, for example, who appears on the list. He is neither Fulani nor even Hausa. He is from the Jarawa ethnic group from Dass in Bauchi State.


Nigerian Television Authority's boss, Yakubu Ibn Mohammed, is also on the list of “Fulani” appointees of strategic government agencies, but he is ethnically Jukun from Taraba State who grew up in Plateau State.

NNPC boss Mele Kyari has also been assigned a “Fulani” ethnicity even though he is a straight-up Kanuri man from Borno.

The only linguistically and culturally Fulani people on the list are FCT minister Mohammed Musa Bello and UBEC boss Hammed Bobboyi who are both from Adamawa State.

A reporter from the South recently interviewed me for a personality profile, and although one of the issues we discussed during the interview was the robust diversity of northern identities and how people mistake me for Fulani, Hausa, “Hausa-Fulani” or Nupe even though I am actually Baatonu from Kwara State, he still went ahead and described me as “Fulani” in his story. This shows how our preconceptions can sometimes distort our perceptions.

I corrected his unintentional mischaracterization of my ethnicity because he was kind enough to let me have a pre-publication readback of his story.

In other words, the South is relentlessly rhetorically Fulanizing the North, particularly the Muslim North, just to fertilize and sustain a simplistic narrative of superhuman Fulani domination. One of my Fulani friends from Adamawa by the name of Idirisu Alkali tells me he is often simultaneously amused and flattered by the prodigious capacities that southerners endue on his people.

The Fulani are now lionized in the South as the lifeblood of the North and the sole designers of all that is ill with Nigeria. But at the core of this sociologically impoverished monomaniacal fixation with the Fulani is a deep-seated but unacknowledged inferiority complex, which is fully realized in the tendency to describe as “Fulani slave” anyone who expresses opinions that depart from the forced and false consensus of the Fulaniphobes in the South.

Since only “masters” can have “slaves,” people who call others “Fulani slaves” have clearly accepted the Fulani as “masters,” indicating that they have also internalized their own inferiority before the Fulani.

But the truth is that the Fulani are just as human as anyone else. They are not a stagnant, undifferentiated, unthinking human monolith with no dissensions. They have the same fears, anxieties, and pains as anybody else. They have both good and bad people like other groups. There’s no conspirative conclave where Fulani people meet and plot to dominate everyone else. They battle disunity within their ranks like all ethnic groups. In fact, like the Igbo, they agonize over the progressive erosion of their language and culture in much of Northern Nigeria.

Muhammadu Buhari on whose account the Fulani are ceaselessly dehumanized and vituperated is, in fact, not culturally or linguistically Fulani. In other words, although he traces patrilineal descent from the Fulani, he doesn’t understand or speak Fulfulde (as the language of the Fulani is called) and has no experience with Fulani culture.

Buhari’s father, Adamu Bafallaje, who was an ardo (as Fulani community elders are called), died in his real hometown of Dumurkul in the Daura Emirate of Katsina State when Buhari wasn’t old enough to know him, so Buhari was brought up by his maternal relatives in Daura. His maternal relatives are ethnically Kanuri people who are nonetheless culturally and linguistically Hausa.

As Mamman Daura’s daughter, Fatima Daura, wrote on the occasion of her father’s 80th birthday, Mamman Daura is Kanuri. The family’s forebears migrated from Borno to a town in what is now Niger Republic and finally to Daura. Note that Mamman Daura’s father, Dauda Daura, shares the same mother (but different fathers) with Buhari. So Buhari’s mother, Hajia Zulaiha, was Kanuri.

Not having grown up with his father and knowing next to nothing about the Fulani, Buhari idealized not just his absent Fulani father but the Fulani people. This is a well-known psychological phenomenon that is encapsulated in the folk wisdom that says, “absence makes the heart grow fonder.” Barack Obama, for instance, idealized his absent Kenyan father—and his Luo people— with an intensity he would never have had if he’d grown up with him.

Buhari’s idealization of his absent Fulani father inspires an exaggerated identification with the Fulani in ways that alienate others and expose innocent Fulani people to unjustified animosity. That’s why I called him the “single greatest threat to the Fulani” in a July 6, 2019 column.

I also pointed out in a January 12, 2019 column titled "Miyetti Allah, Presidential Endorsement and Politics of Fulani Identity" that “People who are on the edge of an identity tend to be more exaggeratedly aggressive in their assertion of the identity than those who are—or see themselves as being—in the mainstream of the identity.

“For instance, when there was a butcherly communal turmoil that pitted Bororo Fulani cattle herders against Yoruba farmers in the Oke-Ogun area of northern Oyo State in October 2000, Buhari led a group of ‘Fulani’ northerners to Ibadan to meet with the late Governor Lam Adesina where he told Adesina, among other things, ‘your people are killing my people.’ A Fulani person from the northeast is unlikely to say that.”

Nothing in what I’ve said is intended to mitigate the injustice of Buhari’s preferentialist style of governance. I started calling out what I called the “undisguised Arewacentricity” in Buhari’s appointment since 2015 when most people were scared to criticize the regime (read, for instance, my September 5, 2015 column titled “Buhari is Losing the Symbolic War”), but to put the entire moral weight of his wrongheaded choices on the Fulani and proceed to demonize them without let is both reprehensible and unconscionable.

There’s no denying that northern Muslim elites have benefitted disproportionately in choice appointments in this regime, but “northern Muslim elite” isn’t synonymous with “Fulani.”

An honest, empathetic role play would probably help. Imagine being from an ethnic group that’s perpetually slandered, maligned, reviled, and vilified as a national pastime because you share ethnic identity with someone—or some people—whose boneheaded policies smolder you like they do your traducers. How would you feel?

Demonizing people based on invariable attributes that are incidental to their humanity, such as their ethnicity or race, is akin to condemning them even before they were born. Malcolm X once called that the worst crime that can ever be committed. Let the toxic, hateful ignorance stop already!


Source: https://www.farooqkperogi.com/2021/06/fulanization-of-north-by-south.html?m=1
you made no sense here.
Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by Racoon(m): 7:10am On Jun 06, 2021
Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by JohnSin97: 7:12am On Jun 06, 2021
Iykoto86:
you made no sense here.

You made no sense quoting the content.

1 Like

Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by Tranquility4u: 7:13am On Jun 06, 2021
DMayor101:
A reporter from the South recently interviewed me for a
personality profile, and although one of the issues we
discussed during the interview was the robust diversity of northern identities and how people mistake me for
Fulani, Hausa, “Hausa-Fulani” or Nupe even though I am actually Baatonu from Kwara State, he still went ahead
and described me as “Fulani” in his story. This shows
how our preconceptions can sometimes distort our
perceptions.
I corrected his unintentional mischaracterization of my
ethnicity because he was kind enough to let me have a
pre-publication readback of his story.



This part of the content made me laugh grin

Some people, even after being corrected and educated, will still not change their wrong perceptions out of their arrogance.

1 Like 2 Shares

Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by mrvitalis(m): 7:16am On Jun 06, 2021
Who is Farooq trying to play ...I have always known he was doing Taqiya with his anti Buhari writings

Who doesn't know that fulani planted people in every tribe in the north ...well almost every tribe ...a big example is the deputy speaker they claimed is middle belt ...but is fulani

He is from the land jos people gave fulani ..yes ruga like settlements so that peace could reign ... instead they converted it to LGA n are demanding more

Research most of buhari appointments most have fulani blood

2 Likes

Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by Racoon(m): 7:16am On Jun 06, 2021
But the truth is that the Fulani are just as human as anyone else.They are not a stagnant, undifferentiated, unthinking human monolith with no dissensions. They have the same fears, anxieties, and pains as anybody else.

They've both good and bad people like other groups. There’s no conspirative conclave where Fulani people meet and plot to dominate everyone else. They battle disunity within their ranks like all ethnic groups. In fact, like the Igbo, they agonize over the progressive erosion of their language and culture in much of Northern Nigeria.

Muhammadu Buhari on whose account the Fulani are ceaselessly dehumanized and vituperated is, in fact, not culturally or linguistically Fulani. In other words, although he traces patrilineal descent from the Fulani, he doesn’t understand or speak Fulfulde (as the language of the Fulani is called) and has no experience with Fulani culture.
Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by SmartPolician: 7:20am On Jun 06, 2021
The north doesn't know much about the south and the south doesn't know much about the north. To the average southerner, anyone from the core north is Hausa/Fulani.

To the core northerner, southerners who are not Yorubas are automatically Igbos. That's why they called Jonathan an Igbo man. grin

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by Nobody: 7:22am On Jun 06, 2021
Your propaganda will not work.

The herdsmen driving cattle into people's farms are FULANI.

The people killing farmers who resist the grazing of their farms are FULANI.

The kidnappers waylaying traffic on our highways are FULANI.

The terrorists who have arrived from Mali, Chad and Niger Republics and have surrounded the forests of Western Nigeria are FULANI.

Clearly, there's a FULANIZATION agenda and we Yorubas will resist it with everything we've got.

We beat them twice, we will decimate them completely this time around. Mark these words.

6 Likes 2 Shares

Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by motayoayinde: 7:28am On Jun 06, 2021
FANTASTIC AND VERY WELL THOUGHT-OUT PIECE.

SADLY THOUGH, THIS IS UNLIKELY TO CHANGE THE MISCONCEPTIONS.
THOSE WHO HOLD THEM DO SO DELIBERATELY.

1 Like

Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by Nobody: 7:36am On Jun 06, 2021
Hmmm
Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by starstaz(m): 7:47am On Jun 06, 2021
The main culprits in this scheme of wrongful appelation and promoter of fulani emphasis is no other than FFK. Second to him is the ipobians MNK. Thank u farook for this classic synopsis.

1 Like

Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by oyatz(m): 8:33am On Jun 06, 2021
JohnSin97:
Farooq is being half smart....the intercultural and intribal relationships and marriages have made core northern tribes into one single identity known as hausa/fulani. An ijebu man will tell you proudly that he is ijebu, but most people can't tell the difference between him and an Ibadan man.

Wrong analogy.

1) The North is a very vast territory populated by diverse people speaking different languages but many practice the same Islamic Religion.

2) Apart from old political divisions in terms of kingdoms, there's no difference between an Ijebu man and an Ibadan man (many Ibadan families originated from Oyo, Ife, Ijebu) but a Kanuri man is much different in culture and language from a Fulanis man.
Kanuris don't understand Fulanis language and both can only communicate freely by using a third learned language- Hausa which serve as a kind of lingual Franca in the North.

I was surprised while serving in Yobe State to see many Fulani Herdsmen unable to speak Hausa fluently.

2 Likes

Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by Imsoblessed: 8:33am On Jun 06, 2021
To what end is this write-up? P
Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by slam7000(m): 8:35am On Jun 06, 2021
I think this is brilliant piece from Kperogi. I found it very educative.

2 Likes

Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by Elvictor: 8:38am On Jun 06, 2021
Afonjas doing what free education can offer

Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by amazingspiderma: 8:53am On Jun 06, 2021
SmartPolician:
The north doesn't know much about the south and the south doesn't know much about the north. To the average southerner, anyone from the core north is Hausa/Fulani.

To the core northerner, southerners who are not Yorubas are automatically Igbos. That's why they called Jonathan an Igbo man. grin

Then it is up to those in the North to clear the air on their ethnicity without trying to look the same. These has been their practice for years.

They change states of origin, location, date of birth and personal vital information that pins them as unique at the snap of a finger in order to obtain favour over others.

This behavior is puzzling and until this behavior is address, they will keep getting the treatment from the south.
Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by umunaija: 8:55am On Jun 06, 2021
The same way northerners call all southern minorities IGBO anytime there's issue and they are on a killing spree in the north, they kill everyone tagging them Igbo but once it is about oil, they will start dividing everyone as igbo, ijaw, efik, isoko etc. That's why nzeogwu's coup is tag Igbo coup everything but once it concerns oil, they will tell you that nzeogwu's people are not Igbo but Niger delta. What an irony
Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by hedonido: 8:57am On Jun 06, 2021
FrLukas:
Your propaganda will not work.

The herdsmen driving cattle into people's farms are FULANI.

The people killing farmers who resist the grazing of their farms are FULANI.

The kidnappers waylaying traffic on our highways are FULANI.

The terrorists who have arrived from Mali, Chad and Niger Republics and have surrounded the forests of Western Nigeria are FULANI.

Clearly, there's a FULANIZATION agenda... .

This is the basis for the Fulani phobia, and I find it repulsive that Kperogi is painting the matter as if the South demonises Fulani because of Buhari. Senseless.

Fulani is demonised (justifiably so) because of the issues you raised up there. Why would a band of idiots from a single ethnic group continually terrorise communities across the South and yet expect that they wouldn't be demonised?

2 Likes

Re: “fulanization” Of The North By The South - By Farooq A. Kperogi by Nobody: 9:00am On Jun 06, 2021
hedonido:


This is the basis for the Fulani phobia, and I find it repulsive that Kperogi is painting the matter as if the South demonises Fulani because of Buhari. Senseless.

Fulani is demonised (justifiably so) because of the issues you raised up there. Why would a band of idiots from a single ethnic group continually terrorise communities across the South and yet expect that they wouldn't be demonised?

He's trying to use subterfuge. Trying to throw off Nigeria's focus on the criminality of that ethnic group.

It won't work.

1 Like

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