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Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralPoliticsTinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi (4297 Views)

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Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by ogododo(op): 10:13am On Feb 21
By Farooq A. Kperogi

Recent events show a widening pattern of killings, abductions and reprisals stretching from Borno to Zamfara, Kebbi, Niger, Kwara and elsewhere. The scale of fatalities alone demands sustained national attention. But the Bola Ahmed Tinubu government’s muted presence in the public response raises troubling questions about its priorities and its appreciation of the fierce urgency of the moment.

Start with Borno State, long regarded as the epicenter of Boko Haram’s insurgency. International media outlets reported last Friday that Boko Haram militants attacked a Nigerian military formation, killing at least eight soldiers and leaving dozens wounded. Casualty figures varied across accounts, but the deaths of eight soldiers were consistently reported.

Incidents of this nature once triggered nationwide debate and highly visible federal reaction. They now pass with limited public engagement outside specialist security coverage. That shift in attention probably reflects outrage fatigue, but it does not reduce the severity of the threat.

In the northwest and north central zones, mass casualty attacks have become distressingly frequent. Reports from Kebbi and Zamfara States describe repeated bandit raids, civilian deaths and abductions.

Again, an Associated Press dispatch from last Friday documented coordinated assaults in Kebbi resulting in at least 33 fatalities. That number alone represents a catastrophic loss for rural communities, yet the federal government hasn’t even acknowledged these tragedies much less comfort victims. This is increasingly becoming a pattern.

The Borgu region, where I am from, illustrates how violence transcends state boundaries while policy responses remain fragmented. Borgu’s communities span Kebbi, Niger and Kwara States. They share historical and cultural ties but operate under different administrative authorities. Armed groups exploit this fragmentation. Attacks in one area of the region reverberate across others and reshape daily behavior far beyond the immediate site of violence.

In Tungan Makeri, Konkoso and Pissa in Borgu Local Government Area of Niger State, news reports and police statements from this week confirmed deadly pre-dawn raids by gunmen. Initial figures indicated about 32 civilians killed across the affected settlements.

Specific breakdowns varied, with six deaths reported in Tungan Makeri and as many as 26 in Konkoso, according to local accounts cited in early coverage. These numbers represent entire families extinguished within hours. They also underscore the persistent vulnerability of communities repeatedly targeted by armed groups.

Earlier in the year, Borgu recorded another mass casualty episode at Kasuwan Daji market. Credible reporting placed the death toll at 30 or more people killed, with several others abducted. Shops were burned. Civilians were shot. Survivors described chaos, devastation and disorientation.

The recurrence of large-scale lethal attacks within the same geographic zone should have triggered an unmistakable escalation in federal visibility. That response has not been evident at the level many residents consider commensurate with the losses.

Across the Kwara axis of Borgu, the psychological impact of nearby massacres is now frighteningly noticeable. In Baruten, formerly part of the historical Borgu configuration, fear recently overwhelmed a weekly market day.

A vehicle passed through town. Someone suspected it might be transporting terrorists. The reaction was immediate and visceral. Traders and buyers fled. Goods were abandoned. People ran without coordination, and injuries followed. Some residents reportedly broke limbs in the stampede. Elderly individuals fell and required hospitalization. Many retreated indoors, remaining inside overheated rooms for hours. Goods abandoned in the market were stolen.

But no attack occurred. The vehicle posed no danger. It was the panic itself that inflicted the harm. This happened in my hometown on a Wednesday, a bustling market day that serves as both an economic outlet and a space of interaction, exchange and communal vitality.

Such reactions are not irrational. They reflect what psychologists call learned responses in environments where credible violence repeatedly erupts nearby.

In adjacent Kaiama Local Government Area of Kwara State, residents recount continual episodes of extreme brutality in the hands of bloodthirsty terrorists, the recent mass slaughters in Woro and Nuku that captured the national and international attention being the latest.

Residents across Borgu consistently describe a sense of exposure and disabling siege. In the Niger State sector, communities report repeated attacks on the same settlements. In Konkoso, for example, locals say after militants killed large numbers of villagers, the assailants returned on February 17 to burn the remaining homes. Whether every detail withstands subsequent verification, the pattern of repeated raids across the region is corroborated by multiple independent reports of killings and abductions.

Governmental reaction shapes how citizens interpret both tragedy and state legitimacy. In Kwara State, the governor’s visit to sites of violence in Kaiama was widely noted by affected residents. Such gestures cannot reverse fatalities, but they acknowledge suffering and communicate presence. Insecurity is not only a military problem. It is also a political and psychological one.

In contrast, many inhabitants of Niger State’s Borgu communities express dissatisfaction with the state government’s posture following major incidents. Residents recount episodes in which official statements emphasized blame.

After the Papiri abductions, villagers say responsibility was publicly shifted toward school authorities without a gubernatorial visit to the affected location. Following reports that more than 70 people were killed in Kasuwan Daji, locals similarly describe narratives of fault attribution unaccompanied by direct engagement with survivors. These perceptions may not capture every administrative constraint, but they significantly influence public trust.

The more pressing concern, however, lies at the federal level. The cumulative death toll across Borno, Kebbi, Niger and Kwara States in just these few cited incidents exceeds any threshold that should trigger unmistakable national urgency.

Eight soldiers killed in Borno. Thirty-three civilians killed in Kebbi. Thirty-two civilians killed across Tungan Makeri, Konkoso and Pissa. Thirty or more killed in Kasuwan Daji market, with local claims of even higher figures, including over 70 fatalities. Locally reported deaths approaching 300 in Woro and Nuku. These are not sporadic disturbances. They are large-scale lethal events distributed across multiple states.

Yet the federal government’s public posture has lacked the intensity typically associated with crises of this magnitude. There has been no sustained national address centered on these specific killings. No widely visible mobilization signaling exceptional concern for Borgu’s repeated devastation. No consistent federal narrative that conveys to affected populations that their losses command the same urgency as tragedies elsewhere.

I agree that security challenges in Nigeria are undeniably complex. Intelligence failures, logistical limits and political coordination problems complicate rapid response. None of these constraints, however, justify the normalization of mass fatalities or the attenuation of federal visibility. When killings of dozens or hundreds struggle to command durable national attention, citizens inevitably question whether their suffering is fully recognized within the national hierarchy of concern.

Persistent violence also produces cumulative secondary effects. Economic activity contracts. Mobility declines. Educational continuity suffers. Residents alter movement patterns, avoid gatherings and recalibrate routine decisions around perception of threat. Fear becomes a structural condition rather than an irregular reaction.

Operation Savannah Shield, recently launched to address insecurity across parts of the north, offers an opportunity for recalibration. Its effectiveness will depend not only on tactical operations but on geographic scope. Borgu’s border communities, repeatedly affected by lethal raids and abductions, require explicit incorporation into security planning. Fragmented jurisdiction has long benefited attackers. Coordinated federal presence could begin reversing that asymmetry.

The number of people who have died unjustly in the hands of nihilistic terrorists this week alone is already staggering. A repetition of this number would signal deeper systemic failure. Preventing that outcome requires more than periodic, contingent deployments. It demands sustained federal attention, interstate coordination and a public posture that communicates unmistakable commitment to civilian safety.

It is worth recalling that even at the height of insecurity during President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration, the scale and frequency of mass killings did not approach what many communities now experience, yet Bola Tinubu, then an opposition figure, publicly urged Jonathan to resign.

Invoking resignation today, however, feels like an exercise in futility because no Nigerian elected official has ever relinquished office solely on account of failure, incompetence or public dissatisfaction. Rather than dissipate intellectual energy on an outcome with no historical precedent, a more pragmatic appeal is necessary.

The president should address the nation directly, acknowledge the severity of the crisis, and demonstrate a visibly intensified commitment to protecting lives. If the state proves unable or unwilling to guarantee basic security across vulnerable regions, then a serious national conversation must also consider whether citizens should be legally empowered to defend themselves, including through responsible firearm ownership, instead of remaining defenseless sitting ducks in the face of unremitting terrorist and bandit violence.
https://www.farooqkperogi.com/2026/02/tinubu-must-address-rising-mass.html?m=1

Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by atiku4President(m): 10:45am On Feb 21
For now, it's all about 2027. Nothing more, nothing less
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by RichBoy247: 10:53am On Feb 21
Yes, he must address rising masses massacre in the South, but for massacre in the North, let the Northern Elders address that. As for Middle Belt, let them first decide whether they are in alliance with the North or with the South
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by loveth360(f): 10:54am On Feb 21
Yoruba government doesn't care about Northern lives.
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by greatiyk4u(m): 11:07am On Feb 21
Tinubu lacks the capacity to do that, it's obvious that he is overrated
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by Brendaniel:
RichBoy247:
Yes, he must address rising masses massacre in the South, but for massacre in the North, let the Northern Elders address that. As for Middle Belt, let them first decide whether they are in alliance with the North or with the South
Which south are you talking about, is it the south that will tell a certain people to leave their region because of an unverified statement that Lagos is no man's land or the south that keeps quiet and moves on when herdsmen kidnap and kill their people including their obas?

Please be specific
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by jmoore(m): 2:07pm On Feb 21
You expect a government that is spending billions of naira in lobby and propaganda that terrorists don't exist to fight insecurity?

Tinubu is inept.
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by IAM4BAT4plus4: 2:50pm On Feb 21
He surely will!







The man is capable....





We believe him and that's why we voted and still going to vote him again come 2027!




Period
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by Aghori: 2:52pm On Feb 21
Would man's suffering and pain ever end huh

Ery body tell me hmm
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by crossfm: 2:52pm On Feb 21
Can you give what you don't have?.

The president is not ready to tackle insecurity. All he is after is his reelection.
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by Obaofaba: 2:52pm On Feb 21
I agree security situation has to improve.

We can't continue like this.

People are dying and most of the deaths are avoidable if the government use all the arsenal at their disposal to fight the terrorists.
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by Magnetic010: 2:52pm On Feb 21
The rising level of insecurity and the seemingly unwillingness and unperturbed attitude of our leaders and security forces is why I will continue to criticise this administration...There is nothing more precious than life and the life of people in Aso rock should not be more valuable than the common man in jigawa or Kano or ondo or anywhere else in the country.
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by Maj196(m): 2:53pm On Feb 21
Tinubu must end the carnage now
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by Mnewton(m): 2:53pm On Feb 21
Hmm not enough comments
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by ajailer(m): 2:54pm On Feb 21
We all know PBAT is a politician first cos he knows without politics he can’t be in the position to say what’s right or wrong and also effect changes. He has good plans for Nigeria, but the north is self sabotaging so anyone that wants to help them is seen as an enemy. I am sure that by the time he comes back for his second time, when there is nothing at stake for him again, he will curb the impunity of the northern leaders.
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by P1PrinceKT(m): 2:54pm On Feb 21
RichBoy247:
Yes, he must address rising masses massacre in the South, but for massacre in the North, let the Northern Elders address that. As for Middle Belt, let them first decide whether they are in alliance with the North or with the South
Carry your migrated brothers and sisters that reside in the North Central, nothing like middle belt.

The countries were two before they were amalgamated and became Nigeria don't deceive yourself.
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by Obaofaba: 2:56pm On Feb 21
crossfm:
Can you give what you don't have?.

The president is not ready to tackle insecurity. All he is after is his reelection.
Are you programmed to wail?

Ain't you a citizen of this country?

The government is surely doing something and if you feel they are not doing enough, why not proffer solutions instead of microzoning your brain to election when we are discussing security issues.
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by Esthered: 2:56pm On Feb 21
We now seem used to such news that we care anymore.

It's spreading to other states and if care isn't taken, the entire country.

I thought it was resource control that was the reason for banditry but it's far from that.

The state governors of these affected regions aren't doing things for these youth in terms of education, job creation, mechanized farming.....
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by Franking: 2:57pm On Feb 21
Tinumbu is busy right now....maybe he'll look into it after next year's election.
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by seunowa(f): 2:58pm On Feb 21
The solution to incessant killings in the North is put an end to sharia law..........
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by Esthered: 2:59pm On Feb 21
seunowa:
The solution to incessant killings in the North is put an end to sharia law..........
Are you sure it's the law that enables them?

Regulate religion like Rwanda for a start IMHO.
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by anonimi: 2:59pm On Feb 21
ogododo:
https://www.farooqkperogi.com/2026/02/tinubu-must-address-rising-mass.html?m=1
The balablu man can’t address something that he has no idea about. He can only address generating revenue from higher tax burdens on people, for his lootocracy.

Anything beyond that, Tinubu is clueless.

Maxymilliano:
The presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu has explained why he delegated some members of the party to respond to questions posed to him.
According to the former Lagos Governor, he adopted the delegation method “to show team-ship”.

Tinubu spoke at the Chatham House lecture titled: ‘Nigeria’s 2023 elections: In conversation with Bola Ahmed Tinubu’, monitored by The Nation.

At the lecture, Tinubu after his opening remarks, assigned Kaduna Governor Nasir El-Rufai to speak on how his (Tinubu-led) government would address insecurity and asked the Director of Strategic Communication of the All Progressives Congress (APC) Presidential Campaign Council, Dele Aleke, to respond to the question on oil theft.

https://thenationonlineng.net/why-i-delegated-el-rufai-ayade-others-to-answer-questions-at-chatham-house-tinubu/?utm_term=Autofeed&utm_medium=Social&utm_source=Facebook#Echobox=1670262252
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by Franking: 3:00pm On Feb 21
Obaofaba:
Are you programmed to wail?

Ain't you a citizen of this country?

The government is surely doing something and if you feel they are not doing enough, why not proffer solutions instead of microzoning your brain to election when we are discussing security issues.
How dare you spew such balderdash! What is the government f**king doing? Insecurity has gotten out of hand and you are talking about wailing!

A state of emergency needs to be declared on security! The government isn't doing half enough....
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by anonimi:
seunowa:
The solution to incessant killings in the North is put an end to sharia law..........
What is the solution to the incessant killings in Kogi, Kwara, Ondo and Oyo states?

End to sharia?

Was there no sharia during the 16 prosperity years of PDP?

Wọn ní akuri ni city boy, ẹyin n sọrọ shariah huh
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by seunowa(f): 3:05pm On Feb 21
Esthered:
Are you sure it's the law that enables them?

Regulate religion like Rwanda for a start IMHO.
Yes, that is where they derived their motivations. And sharia practice is the resultant product of Quran and Hadiths...
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by anonimi: 3:07pm On Feb 21
Obaofaba:
Are you programmed to wail?

Ain't you a citizen of this country?

The government is surely doing something and if you feel they are not doing enough, why not proffer solutions instead of microzoning your brain to election when we are discussing security issues.
Are you programmed for propaganda lies?

What solutions did city boy proffer before 2015, when he created the impression that PDP’s peace and prosperity was not good enough?

When you sow wind, expect to reap a whirlwind. This is karma for you.

Is it not abundantly clear that Tinubu is a clueless korofo empty barrel who makes plenty of balablu loudest noise huh

EkoIle1:
It is now abundantly clear that President Jonathan has finally bared his fangs confirming what was widely speculated. By declaring a state of emergency in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa, he has intimidated and emasculated the governors of these States. We are witnessing a dangerous trend in the art of governance and a deliberate ploy to subvert constitutional democracy.

The body language of the Jonathan administration leads any keen watcher of events with unmistakable conclusion of the existence of a surreptitious but barely disguised intention to muzzle the elected governments of these states for what is clearly a display of unpardonable mediocrity and diabolic partisanship geared towards 2015.

Borno and Yobe states have been literally under armies of occupation with the attendant excruciating hardship experienced daily by the indigenes and residents of these areas. This government now wants to use the excuse of the security challenges faced by the Governors to remove them from the states considered hostile to the 2015 PDP/Jonathan project.

Let me be quick to say that this administration will be setting in motion a chain of events the end of which nobody can predict. Experience has shown clearly that actions, such as this one under consideration, often give root to radical ideologies and extremist tendencies, a direct opposite of the intended outcome of unwarranted and unintelligent meddlesomeness. The present scenario playing out in the country reminds one of the classical case of a mediocre craftsman who continually blames the tools of his trade for his serial failure but refuses to look at his pitiable state with a view to adjusting.

http://premiumtimesng.com/opinion/134435-jonathan-goes-for-broke-by-bola-ahmed-tinubu.html
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by seunowa(f): 3:09pm On Feb 21
anonimi:
What is the solution to the incessant killings in Kogi, Kwara, Ondo and Oyo states?

End to sharia?

Was there no sharia during the 16 prosperity years of PDP?

Wọn ní akuri ni city boy, ẹyin no sọrọ shariah huh
I hope you heard what happened in a village outskirts of ilorin. The terrorists called the locals out to accept what sharia truly preaches but the villagers rejected it. I think you know what happened next......
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by demstone: 3:09pm On Feb 21
BTW MONDAY ND FRIDAY THIS WEEK OVER 100 NIGERIANS HAVE BEEN DELETED...D QUESTION IS WHY DO WE ALWAYS HAVE HIGH DELETING ONCE ELECTIONS ARE APPROACHING.. WERE DIS PEOPLE DELETED COS OF TODAYS ELECTIONS.. WHO IS HOPING TO BENEFIT
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by anonimi: 3:12pm On Feb 21
ajailer:
We all know PBAT is a politician first cos he knows without politics he can’t be in the position to say what’s right or wrong and also effect changes.

He has good plans for Nigeria, but the north is self sabotaging so anyone that wants to help them is seen as an enemy. I am sure that by the time he comes back for his second time, when there is nothing at stake for him again, he will curb the impunity of the northern leaders.
How is increasing tax burden on people, to hit his revenue target in August, while bragging about ending borrowing equal to good plans?

What good plans are there for the worst rogue in history, who is borrowing more than PDP politicians that gave us cheap petrol and better life of less insecurity, less corruption, less inflation etc?



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bn29b0SkCWU?si=7tC3dAEDcq_ovuZu
Re: Tinubu Must Address Rising Mass Massacres Now- Kperogi by walozanga(m): 3:13pm On Feb 21
ajailer:
We all know PBAT is a politician first cos he knows without politics he can’t be in the position to say what’s right or wrong and also effect changes. He has good plans for Nigeria, but the north is self sabotaging so anyone that wants to help them is seen as an enemy. I am sure that by the time he comes back for his second time, when there is nothing at stake for him again, he will curb the impunity of the northern leaders.
You are a heartless fellow, so because of second term innocent helpless citizens show continue to be massacred till after he win.
This shows how dangerous your mindset is. If i say thunder fire you now, u nogo happy
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