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Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ - Politics - Nairaland

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Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ by jmoore(op): 11:32am On Aug 14, 2025
After speaking with residents and perusing documents in the aftermath of a massacre, FIJ’s EMMANUEL UTI found that the Benue State Government had a decade to nip the recurring attacks in the bud.

On May 25, Emmanuel Uzeh, a Yelewata resident in his mid 40s, returned home to learn that his father’s older brother had died. His uncle and three of his children were on their way to the town when armed herders attacked and killed them.

There was tension in Yelewata in the days that followed. Uzeh recalled a visit by Fulani elders, who met with villagers in what seemed like an attempt at reconciliation. They apologised for the killings and blamed it on what they described as the “arrogance” of a few unruly young herders.

“They admitted it. They said they were sorry and asked for peace,” Uzeh told FIJ.

But the peace was short-lived. On June 13, barely three weeks later, armed Fulani herders stormed the community again. That night, Uzeh’s younger brother was killed. In the coming days, more villagers were attacked and killed in their farms.

Emmanuel Uzeh while speaking with FIJ Nigeria. Photo credit: Emmanuel Uti/FIJ Nigeria
This occurred despite a promise by Kayode Egbetokun, the Inspector General of Police (IGP), to stop the killings in Benue and bring the perpetrators to book.

PEACE AND PROBLEMS

In the months leading up to the devastating June 13–14 attacks, Yelewata was already on edge, gripped by rising violence. Warning signs were everywhere. Residents told FIJ of repeated clashes: farmers injured in the fields after confronting young Fulani herders who drove cattle through their crops, sporadic gunfire echoing at night, and villagers killed before the police could intervene.

One February evening, danger struck closer to home. A woman returning from the market was stranded when her commercial vehicle ran out of fuel near the community. While the driver went in search of petrol, armed men emerged from the bush. The passengers fled in panic, but the attackers seized the woman.

She remained in captivity until the people of Yelewata managed to pay her ransom. At first, the men called her husband and demanded a N10 million ransom, but they later lowered their demand. The husband, according to resident Michael Ajah, tried to raise the money but couldn’t. Frustrated by the constant calls, he told them they could kill her if they wanted and that she wouldn’t be the first to die.

“But they didn’t kill her. They eventually released her,” Ajah told FIJ. “This was after people in the village came together to help. The Fulani men contacted some villagers, and we pleaded with them to accept what we had. They asked us to bring harvested crops along with the N300,000 we raised as ransom.”

With incidents like this continuing into April, anxiety deepened among the people of Yelewata. The youths approached the local chief, who, according to Ajah, reported the situation to the local government chairman. But little changed.

In May, following the killing of Uzeh’s family, the community reached a breaking point. A group of men travelled to the State House in Makurdi to inform the government of the worsening crisis.

OUR COMMANDER DID NOT GIVE US AN ORDER

Days before the incident, many Yelewata residents heard rumours that Fulani herders were planning attacks on their community and others nearby. Those who believed the warnings moved their families out of the area. But many ignored them. Some of those who stayed behind paid with their lives.

For survivors, that night would forever change how they saw the army and the police. Some lost what little faith they had left in the military. Others spoke highly of the police. For some, the attack only confirmed what they had long suspected: when the killing started, they would be on their own.

As gunfire tore through the community, many women fled barefoot in the dark, heading towards the Roman Catholic Mission school, where soldiers from the Nigerian Army’s 72nd Special Forces Battalion were stationed. The school was untouched that night, but the nearby Catholic Church — less than 50 metres away — would have been burnt down if not for the police, who repelled the attackers.

The primary school in Yelewata where the women ran to for safety but the army turned them down. Photo credit: Emmanuel Uti/FIJ Nigeria
A woman in the community (name withheld for security reasons) told FIJ that during the chaos, those who reached the school pleaded with the soldiers to intervene, but they refused.

“We begged them. We kept calling on the army to help, but they told us their oga — their commandant — hadn’t given an order. Only the police tried. They faced the attackers head-on and bought time for some people to escape. But when their bullets ran out and they were outnumbered, even they had to retreat,” she said.

She’s not the only one with this account. At the camp for the Internal Displaced Persons (IDP) in Makurdi’s New International Market, two women told FIJ they also heard soldiers at the Roman Catholic Mission Primary School say they couldn’t act without orders from their commandant.

INACTION SPEAKS LOUDER THAN WORDS

After the massacre in June, the Nigerian Mobile Police (MOPOL) were deployed to Yelewata. FIJ saw them on the ground during a visit to the community. But the killings didn’t stop. They returned to the rhythm of sporadic, relentless violence that had plagued the area long before the June attack. With each fresh incident, the gulf of distrust between villagers and the army widened.

Around 2 pm on July 29, three young men were cooking at home when they spotted armed Fulani herders approaching. The one tending the pot sensed danger and beckoned to the other two, who were inside, to run.

They abandoned their food and sprinted towards the expressway, where the Yelewata police post stood. Gunshots rang out as they ran. The men alerted the police, and two officers gave chase, briefly exchanging fire with the attackers. The policemen soon retreated because the attackers outmatched them.

And the soldiers? They simply watched.

“The soldiers just stood by until the Fulani men chased the police. When the police ran back, they saw the soldiers but the soldiers didn’t fire a single shot until the Fulani attackers had already left. What they did made me regret ever having them in Yelewata. The Fulani were exchanging bullets with the police at close range, and the soldiers did nothing,” Ajah told FIJ.

FIJ contacted a soldier whom residents said was stationed at the Yelewata Primary School during the June 13 massacre. He denied being present and refused to confirm whether troops had been ordered not to intervene.

When asked directly whether soldiers had received any orders to repel the attackers, he said, “I cannot answer that.”

THE DSS KNEW BUT THE ARMY IGNORED INTEL

The massacre in Yelewata was not a sudden storm. It was a slow-moving cloud of dread that many people, especially those who are inured to the persistent violence in the state, could think of.

On May 13, exactly one month before the attack, the Department of State Services (DSS) sent a confidential memo to Moses Gara, commander of Operation Whirl Stroke (OPWS), warning of “suspected Fulani militias” plotting coordinated assaults on communities in Benue and Nasarawa. The memo, which was later leaked to TheCable, explicitly named Yelewata as one of the targets.

The DSS had mapped out the threat in detail: militants holding meetings in Doma LGA, armed men gathering in forests near Yelewata, and plans to unleash violence on Tiv settlements along the Benue-Nasarawa border.

Their motive? Retaliation over the seizure of cattle.

“The militias are currently hibernating…and are planning to attack Agatu, Gwer West/East, Makurdi, Guma, and Loko communities,” the memo read.

The DSS analysis aligned with what many locals already believed. A man who insisted on anonymity told FIJ that Fulani mercenaries had a series of meetings before they attacked. He knew because a Fulani cattle owner tells him when an attack is about to occur.

“That day, he (the Fulani man) called me. He asked where I was. I said I wasn’t around, and he just said ‘okay’. He would usually call to give a hint when trouble was coming. But on June 12, all he said was ‘okay’. The next day was a bloodbath,” the man told FIJ.

When FIJ called the Fulani man who had briefed our source, he said nothing about the attack, but warned the journalist to stay away from Yelewata.

“If anything happens, I’ll let you know. But stay away from that place for now,” he said.

THE ATTACK FEELS COORDINATED

Given the frequency of the attacks, their brutal consistency over the years, and the utter absence of consequences for the perpetrators, many in Yelewata are convinced this is no mere cycle of violence. To them, it is calculated, deliberate and part of a broader push to drive the Tiv from their ancestral land.

Jacob Anya, a farmer from Yelewata, is one of those voices. He believes the bloodshed of June 13–14 was not random. It was, he insists, the latest stage in a long-running and coordinated campaign. He argues that if it were not so, both the federal and state governments, as well as the military, would have taken massive and determined action to rid their land of this recurring problem.

“Right now, as I speak to you, more than half of the local government area has been displaced from their ancestral homes. Many are living in refugee camps or with relatives in the cities. Some have even fled as far as Yorubaland. In fact, I myself am preparing to leave soon because the situation has become unbearable,” Anya told FIJ.

Anya is not alone. Many residents echo the same sentiment: that what is unfolding in Benue is no accident but a slow, orchestrated dispossession. Even senior officials have voiced similar concerns. Joyce Ramnap and Matthew Abo, commissioners for information in Plateau and Benue states respectively, have both described the violence as part of a “coordinated, genocidal plot” aimed at seizing ancestral lands, crippling rural economies and pushing survivors into perpetual poverty.

The statistics bear this out. Over 615,000 people are displaced in Benue. Most of them have lost the farms they depend on, the same farms they are too afraid to till and are now losing to grazing.

“Every year, it worsens,” Anya said bitterly. “You plant, you harvest, you store what little you have and then, overnight, it’s gone. Burnt and looted. You’re left with nothing. If this isn’t a deliberate plan to erase us from our land, then what is it?”

Anya started thinking this way after a relative of his was killed on the farm. Prior to his relative’s death, Anya said, a Fulani herder had asked him if the Tiv people wanted to “finish the land” because they were clearing the uncultivated area.

“Now, we can’t even go one kilometre outside of town without fear of being attacked,” he said.

Anya believes that the army shields the Fulani herders and may be colluding with them. According to Anya, every time soldiers from Giza in Nasarawa visit their area, trouble follows.

“It’s almost as if their presence signals the herders to strike,” he said.

“Whenever the army sees someone from our tribe, even with something as simple as a small knife, they’ll question us. But the Fulani walk freely, armed and dressed in military jackets that hide their weapons. They’ve been doing this for years.”

THERE HAS ALWAYS BEEN A PROBLEM

Research and news archives trace the roots of Benue’s farmer-herder conflict back over a decade, though locals disagree on exactly when it began. Some insist it started in 2009, others point to 2011, while a few mark 2014 as the year it spiralled beyond control. What they all agree on, however, is that it has been simmering far too long.

A point-of-sale agent in Yelewata said that when the herders attacked them in the past, they did not sit back helplessly as they now appear to do. He recalled that in 2014, the Fulani herders, whom many residents say take cover in Kadarko and Giza in Nasarawa, attacked Yelewata. But they did not go unpunished.

“We made some plans on how to attack them and we attacked them. That ended the problems we now experience for some time,” the agent said.

Peter Ishor, a resident of Daudu, a community close to Yelewata, offered a similar tale of that turbulent year. When herders attacked his community on March 7, 2014, he said, it was the youths who rallied to defend their homes.

“We had no choice,” Ishor said.

“If someone storms your house and tries to slaughter your family, will you simply sit there and sleep comfortably? No! You rise and fight back. We only ever defended ourselves, never attacked first. But they pushed us to the edge.”


A DECADE OF WARNING IGNORED

In 2014, Gabriel Suswam, who was governor of Benue at the time, narrowly escaped death when Fulani herdsmen ambushed his convoy in Guma Local Government Area during an on-the-ground visit to assess the aftermath of previous violent attacks.

Just before the ambush, 64 villages had been sacked and at least 37 people killed. Soldiers who had initially accompanied the governor pulled out midway, claiming they were not asked to continue, leaving Suswam vulnerable.

The remains of a shop with harvested farm produce. Photo credit: Emmanuel Uti/FIJ Nigeria
The attackers opened fire from nearby bushes while the governor was inspecting destroyed homes. The exchange of gunfire lasted nearly an hour. That a sitting governor could be so exposed, and the attackers that bold, was a glaring sign that the crisis had already spiralled out of control. Even then, no fundamental shift followed.

According to the Nigeria Watch Project’s 2017 report on Benue State, Benue’s violent trajectory dates back well before any grazing law was passed or herder militia armed themselves with assault rifles. “Conflicts between farmers and herders have been recurrent in the region since at least 2007,” the report states

The pattern was visible even then. By 2014, over 400 people had died in a series of communal and herder-related conflicts. Border local government areas such as Gwer West, Guma, Agatu and Logo (neighbours of Yelewata) were already flagged as hotspots.

“Violence frequently occurs in border LGAs such as Gwer West, Guma, Agatu, and Logo,” the researchers noted

But the most damning part of that report wasn’t just the death toll. It was what the government didn’t do about it.

“The state government has repeatedly failed to provide adequate response or security reinforcements,” the report warned in 2017.

That same year, Benue passed the Anti-Open Grazing Law, a move that offered symbolic resolve but little practical change. The state’s security condition barely changed and the vulnerable indigenes were left alone.

The authors of the report added that “the cyclical nature of these clashes… suggests an absence of effective conflict resolution mechanisms and weak security presence in affected areas”.

Yelewata was one of those areas. By 2025, the pattern had simply repeated but with deadlier consequences.

RESPONSES

On Thursday, FIJ emailed the Benue State Government for comments on the recent happenings in Yelewata but they had not responded at press time.

FIJ also called Lieutenant Colonel Anele Dir, the Army Public Relations Officer (PRO), on August 6. She refused to comment. The army official asked FIJ to contact the spokesperson of the Operation Whirl Stroke. She then promised to send the phone number of Operation Whirl Stroke’s PRO. At press time, she had yet to do so.
https://fij.ng/article/bloodbath-in-benue-3-state-negligent-in-not-protecting-yelewata-soldiers-stood-by-as-june-july-attacks-occurred/

Re: Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ by okpouman: 12:00pm On Aug 14, 2025
These tiv people no serious.

They are not a serious people at all.
Fulani dey do meeting on top your head una never do any meetings on their head.
Re: Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ by MasterJayJay: 7:11pm On Aug 14, 2025
Tinubu supporters have disappeared.
They won't comment on this thread.
Re: Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ by dederocs(m): 7:11pm On Aug 14, 2025
Compromised elements must be routed out and flushed out.
Re: Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ by Leboska(m): 7:40pm On Aug 14, 2025
Tinubu is known for appointing incompetent fellows, his appointment is not based on merit but based on man know man
Re: Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ by Leboska(m): 7:40pm On Aug 14, 2025
Tinubu is known for appointing incompetent fellows, his appointment is not based on merit but based on man know man, Escobar well done
Re: Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ by jmoore(op): 10:22am On Aug 15, 2025
nlfpmod
Re: Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ by chessbazaar(m): 11:03am On Aug 15, 2025
Insecurities was a factor in last presidential election. So which law state that insecurity should not be politicize?
Re: Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ by Fajimarketplace: 11:04am On Aug 15, 2025
Really disheartening to see. They must be sincere in this fight against insecurities.
Re: Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ by Manny21: 11:06am On Aug 15, 2025
They make more money for standing by. More security allocation will come if the crisis escalates.
Re: Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ by Mrfixitt(m): 11:06am On Aug 15, 2025
All hands must be on deck to remove the clueless druggie president from power come 2027 else Nigeria will be destroyed beyond belief
Re: Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ by huptin(m): 11:07am On Aug 15, 2025
If you know how islamic terrorism work, you will find it easy to see the end goal of this constant killings.

It may seem Haphazard at first but you will see clearly a genius plan that involves a long term goal, it could be 200 years in the making but children unborn will be indoctrinated from birth to continue where their forbears ended.

The case of Nigeria is clear, it may look isolated but it is totally connected to the global goal of islamic conquest. The goal is total take over of the entire Nigerian landscape, symbolized by the dipping of the koran into the atlantic ocean.

For the entire south to be taken over, the middle belt has to be destroyed, that middle belt is the buffer between north and South, A part of the middle belt is already seen as conquered, Kwara, Kogi and Niger. But the presence of a large population of christians is the major challenge here but that is just a matter of time, it is an obstacle that is surmountable.

With Benue gone, Taraba and co, will be easy. Then they face the south. Whether this will work is dependent on future global events, for instance if the US and europe becomes weakened as the islamists hope, then it becomes much easier but the high likelihood of foreign intervention from US and europe is a major deterent that can be managed by a slow but sustained strategy of careful elimination dressed in the garb of herder/farmer clashes or whatever.

But one thing is sure, they wont stop until they either take over or they are stopped.
Re: Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ by alphaconde(m): 11:07am On Aug 15, 2025
No where is safe really. No where is safe

Till its election week
Re: Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ by adamkkk: 11:07am On Aug 15, 2025
who won Benue in the last election. I want to known before speaking
Re: Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ by dododawa1: 11:07am On Aug 15, 2025
CUTLASS CUTLASS CUTLASS




FULL FULL FULL




Benue state Benue state Benue state
Re: Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ by Houseofglam7(f): 11:12am On Aug 15, 2025
This is rather unsettling to read. My heart breaks for them.
Re: Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ by kalvoken(m): 11:15am On Aug 15, 2025
okpouman:
These tiv people no serious.

They are not a serious people at all.
Fulani dey do meeting on top your head una never do any meetings on their head.
You speak like a stranger in the land.

When the herdsmen attack, the government protects them with security agencies.

Just few hours ago, your president announced about the bringing back the repentant Bokos to the society. Just for his political gain

VP is known to be an ally of kabiru sokoto the of avuja bombing. He has the architectural design of BH.

Tulumbu once asked "where is the cow" when the daught of his statesman was annihilated and unalived.
Re: Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ by Dogalmighty17:
There you have it. Proof of what we all have been suspecting for so long. The Nigerian army has tactfully supported the Fulani killings going on all over the country.

The soldiers are posted to these communities not to prevent Fulani attacks but rather to disarm the attacked communities and stop them from defending themselves just like in Plateau state for instance.
Re: Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ by Racoon(m): 11:23am On Aug 15, 2025
So so sad. Of course Lt General TY Danjuma told this nation that the Nigerian military is complicit in all these wanton killings.
Re: Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ by GabrielYulaw(m): 11:34am On Aug 15, 2025
okpouman:
These tiv people no serious.

They are not a serious people at all.
Fulani dey do meeting on top your head una never do any meetings on their head.
Their options are limited, more especially as their attackers get limitless federal and state backing. If they start retaliating or even defending themselves, then the army will move from its current posture of defending and protecting their attackers to joining in the attacks. So, they are damned if they fight back and damned if they don't.
Re: Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ by GabrielYulaw(m): 11:36am On Aug 15, 2025
kalvoken:
You speak like a stranger in the land.

When the herdsmen attack, the government protects them with security agencies.

Just few hours ago, your president announced about the bringing back the repentant Bokos to the society. Just for his political gain

VP is known to be an ally of kabiru sokoto the of avuja bombing. He has the architectural design of BH.

Tulumbu once asked "where is the cow" when the daught of his statesman was annihilated and unalived.
It protects, supplies, coddles, and arms them. There's zero doubt on that. The whole thing is bewildering because a lot of these herdsmen aren't even Nigerian, and the first and most important duty of this and any government is to safeguard the lives and liberties of the citizenry.

More bewildering is that the government must know that victims don't stay victims forever and eventually start fighting back. And when they do, the whole thing could quickly spiral into a civil war, or at least a big war.
Re: Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ by Faposky95: 11:37am On Aug 15, 2025
MasterJayJay:
Tinubu supporters have disappeared.

They won't comment on this thread.
I bin tink say na me go first observe .....
Na story and palliative now, you go see their beggarly comments......
Re: Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ by Kazeem47(m): 11:42am On Aug 15, 2025
The problem in Benue is caused by both the locals and Herdsmen.There are lots of criminal gangs in Benue that can face the killer Herdsmen but won't,there was a time the Military went for peace talk between the locals but the locals attack and killed the Military men and cart away their weapons,why can't they use that energy to face the herdsmen?Most of those herdsmen are rearing cows that belong to benue politicians,if not why will they keep quiet when their citizens are killed on a daily basis?
Re: Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ by Dogalmighty17: 11:46am On Aug 15, 2025
Kazeem47:
The problem in Benue is caused by both the locals and the herdsmen.There is hatred between the different ethnic groups in the state.
Herdsmen are no indigenes of Benue state. You can't visit someone's land and freely graze on his crops and then kill them when they speak out.
Re: Soldiers Stood By As June, July Attacks Occurred In Benue - FIJ by dexmond: 11:49am On Aug 15, 2025
These names sound like Igbo people carved into Benue.
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