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Who Are The Fulani? - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralPoliticsWho Are The Fulani? (841 Views)

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Who Are The Fulani? by Nobody: 7:57pm On Oct 31, 2020
The Fula people, often described as the Fulani, are regarded as the world’s largest nomadic group: about 20 million people dispersed across Western Africa. They reside mostly in Nigeria, Mali, Guinea, Cameroon, Senegal, and Niger. They also can be found in Central African Republic and Egypt.

In Nigeria, the Fulani comprise “the most populous and politically influential” of more than 250 ethnic groups in the country. They speak Fula languages as well as Hausa, English, French and Arabic. Nigeria’s president, Muhammadu Buhari, is ethnic Fulani.

The centuries-old Fulani heritage is pastoral, organized primarily around nomadic herding of cattle, sheep and goats, though segments of the Fulani farm crops or live in urban areas.

The Fulani were early adopters of Islam, participating in holy wars, or jihads, in the 16th Century that established them as a dominant social and economic force in Western Africa.

Roots of conflict

As the frontier of the Sahara Desert has moved southward, Fulani herds have gradually been pushed southward toward Nigeria’s “Middle Belt,” a handful of states straddling the pre-colonial line dividing Nigeria’s predominantly Muslim north from its Christian south. The Middle Belt is a farming region, and the advancing Fulani-owned herds have increasingly encroached on croplands.

The resulting conflicts over land have taken on an ethnic and religious character, as many of the farmers of Nigeria’s Middle Belt are ethnic Berom, an indigenous people who are predominantly Christian.

Especially in the shadow of Boko Haram’s campaign, which began in 2009, to impose Islamic law across Nigeria, Fulani conflicts with farming villages have become more sinister than simple land disputes that boil over into violence. Instead, armed Fulani have planned and executed operations that have killed and chased away thousands of Christians.

Militants “descend on the villages in the night or in the day and carry out cruel attacks against innocent people, including women and children,” according to an assessment of Nigeria by Open Doors, a charity that provides aid to Christians who live under pressure because of their faith. “There are moves by the governments of Benue, Kaduna, Nasarawa and Taraba States to establish and reserve grazing fields for Hausa-Fulani Muslim herdsmen. This means that swathes of land from indigenous Christian communities are taken away for that purpose, depriving Christians of their farming fields and livelihood.”

A campaign to Islamize Nigeria

The 2015 Global Terrorism Index, published by the Institute for Economics and Peace, characterized Fulani militants as one of the five deadliest terrorist organizations in the world. Unlike Boko Haram’s goal to create an Islamic government, “Fulani militants have very localised goals, mainly greater access to grazing lands for livestock,” according to the index.

Open Doors says this view is too limited. Two 2015 reports commissioned by Open Doors concluded the Fulani are engaged in a campaign that can be described as ethnic cleansing of the Middle Belt. In Taraba state specifically, Fulani militants are waging “a massive campaign to displace indigenous Christian farmers.”

For example, in the aftermath of the March 2016 massacre in the village of Agatu in Benue state in central Nigeria, survivors quoted by Christian-rights advocates said the attackers specifically targeted Christians and churches and spared Muslims and mosques.

Said Arne Mulders, Open Doors’ West Africa research expert:
“These herders have historically played a role in jihad, and they have grown increasingly radical in recent times due to the influx of radical Islamist preaching by missionaries from Saudi Arabia and Iran. The radicalization in the Fulani has also kept pace with the Boko Haram radicalization. The Fulanis’ actions are also shaped by concept of Darul Islam, where everything belongs to Allah directly and to his followers indirectly–including the land where they want to let their cattle craze. They believe it is right for them to take those resources by force from infidels and apostates.”

Between these two interpretations, the US Commission on International Religious Freedom, an advisory body to the US government, walks a middle line. In Nigeria, “fears of ethnic and religious domination are long-standing,” the commission said in its 2016 annual report. “Given that religious identity frequently falls along regional, ethnic, political, and socio-economic lines, it routinely provides flashpoints for violence.”

Following the Agatu massacre, the Nigerian Senate went on record connecting Fulani attacks to Boko Haram. The Agatu attackers included Boko Haram gunmen, according to the Senate resolution. In the face of the “tremendous success” of the Nigerian Army’s campaign against Boko Haram, its members are blending themselves among the Fulani, Sen. Emmanuel Bwacha told the Pulse news organization.

“There is a change of tactics by insurgents who now parade as herdsmen to make it difficult for the public to identify them,” Pulse quoted Bwacha as saying

https://www.worldwatchmonitor.org/who-are-the-fulani/
Re: Who Are The Fulani? by Openbusiness:
WRONG! The global population of Fulanis in the world is estimated at around 20 to 25 million, so they DO NOT comprise most populous tribe in Nigeria. Influential, Yes; but most influential, NO, most populous, definitely NO! Rather, I believe that the Fulanis are the most strategic tribe in Nigeria.


#1. The Hausas are the most populous. The global population of Hausas in the world is estimated at about 80 million people.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hausa_people

#2. The Yorubas are the 2nd most populous. The global population of Yorubas in the world is estimated at about 47 million people.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoruba_people

#3. The Igbos are the 3rd most populous. The global population of Igbos in the world is estimated at about 42 million people.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Igbo_people

#4. The Fulanis are the 4th most populous. The global population of Fulanis in the world is estimated at about 25 million people.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fula_people

#5. The Ijaws are the 5th most populous. The global population of Ijaws in the world is estimated at about 15 million people.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ijaw_people

#6. The Ibibios are the 6th most populous. The global population of Ibibios in the world is estimated at about 10 million people.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ibibio_people

#7. The Tivs are the 7th most populous. The gloa population of Tivs in the world is estimated at about 6.5 million people.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiv_people

I believe these are the 7 largest ethnic groups in Nigeria. Anyone that has tangible proofs to counter this claim should provide it. We disagree to agree to learn cool
Re: Who Are The Fulani? by MalcoImX: 8:02pm On Oct 31, 2020
Who are the haters of the Fulani?
Re: Who Are The Fulani? by Nobody: 8:16pm On Oct 31, 2020
MalcoImX:
Who are the haters of the Fulani?
not me smiley
Re: Who Are The Fulani? by BOOZELEE: 8:18pm On Oct 31, 2020
They are the trouble makers of Africa

Not friendly but friendly if they have bad intentions

Arrogant with power

Good to keep as distant friends

Always looking malnourished and skinny asif it is a taboo to be fat.Show me a fat Fulani man and I will show u a goat that wrestles a lion.


But they get fine gels.
Re: Who Are The Fulani? by CodeTemplar: 8:25pm On Oct 31, 2020
That 20m figure should be for Nigeria alone because the rule in Nigeria Cameroon and like seven other nations
Re: Who Are The Fulani? by Seniorwriter(m): 8:29pm On Oct 31, 2020
This Generation is moving away from ethnicity and tribal differences..... It's a cancer eating Nigeria up ......Though it's good to know ones roots but never forget to put humanity first!


Proactivity Leads To Productivity!

#SayNoToTribalism

©Seniorwriter
Re: Who Are The Fulani? by Nobody: 8:30pm On Oct 31, 2020
CodeTemplar:
That 20m figure should be for Nigeria alone because the rule in Nigeria Cameroon and like seven other nations
No, its 16m in Nigeria alone.

https://africacenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/Table-Composition-of-Fulani-within-Total-Population-by-Country-3.png
Re: Who Are The Fulani? by Nobody: 8:30pm On Oct 31, 2020
Seniorwriter:
This Generation is moving away from ethnicity and tribal differences..... It's a cancer eating Nigeria up ......Though it's good to know ones roots but never forget to put humanity first!


Proactivity Leads To Productivity!

#SayNoToTribalism

©Seniorwriter
#OPisNotAboutTribalism

This is a small exposition of the Fula people, and cause of recent conflict in Nigeria.

FYI , I am neither Christian nor Muslim.

Thanks.
Re: Who Are The Fulani? by Seniorwriter(m): 9:25pm On Oct 31, 2020
frosbel2:
#OPisNotAboutTribalism

This is a small exposition of the Fula people, and cause of recent conflict in Nigeria.

FYI , I am neither Christian nor Muslim.

Thanks.
It is what it is!
Try come up with topics that can solve conflicts rather than dwell on the causes of conflict!


Proactivity Leads To Productivity!
©Seniorwriter
Re: Who Are The Fulani? by Nobody: 9:32pm On Oct 31, 2020
Seniorwriter:
It is what it is!
Try come up with topics that can solve conflicts rather than dwell on the causes of conflict!


Proactivity Leads To Productivity!
©Seniorwriter
Conflicts are only solved when the root cause is understood, accepted by all parties , and remediated for the benefit of all. They are not solved by wishing they are solved.
Re: Who Are The Fulani? by updatechange(m): 9:40pm On Oct 31, 2020
Fulanis are cows
Re: Who Are The Fulani? by Seniorwriter(m): 9:49pm On Oct 31, 2020
[quote author=frosbel2 post=95546579]Conflicts are only solved when the root cause is understood, accepted by all parties , and remediated for the benefit of all. They are not solved by wishing they are solved.[/quote


So how did your post help to point out a solution...kindly highlight where it did !

It is What it is .....
Whereas my post in that your writeup sends a message of a new mindset for cohabitation!

Proactivity Leads To Productivity!

© Seniorwriter
Re: Who Are The Fulani? by Nobody: 9:55pm On Oct 31, 2020
[quote author=Seniorwriter post=95547013][/quote]Stop waffling brother. There were no derogatory statements about Fulani in the article.

Thanks.
Re: Who Are The Fulani? by Seniorwriter(m): 10:01pm On Oct 31, 2020
frosbel2:
Stop waffling brother. There were no derogatory statements about Fulani in the article.

Thanks.
You are the one waffling here.....

Did your post profer a SOLUTION!?
Kindly highlight it.

Proactivity Leads To Productivity!

©Seniorwriter
1 Reply

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