• Home
  • Anti-Corruption
  • Fact-Check
  • Economy
  • National
  • Security
  • Features
  • State
  • Event
  • E-Book
Search
  • Home
  • About
  • Adverts
  • Contact
Sign in
Welcome! Log into your account
Forgot your password? Get help
Password recovery
Recover your password
A password will be e-mailed to you.
PRNIGERIA PRNigeria News
PRNIGERIA PRNIGERIA
  • Home
  • Anti-Corruption
  • Fact-Check
  • Economy
  • National
  • Security
  • Features
  • State
  • Event
  • E-Book
Home Features Benue Cries, Tinubu Promises, Killings Continue
  • Features
  • Security

Benue Cries, Tinubu Promises, Killings Continue

By
Kabir Abdulsalam
-
June 24, 2025
President Bola Ahmed Tinubu

Benue Cries, Tinubu Promises, Killings Continue

By Kabir Abdulsalam,

When President Bola Ahmed Tinubu landed in Benue on June 18, 2025, he was not welcomed with cheers or celebration. He was met by a landscape soaked in blood and sorrow.

In Yelewata and Daudu communities of The Food Basket of the Nation, over 100 people had been butchered, homes turned to ashes, and families uprooted from land they had called home for generations. Barely two days after that visit, violence returned—this time to Wannune in Tarka Local Government Area.

The pattern is painfully familiar: massacre, followed by condolence visits, media briefings, and empty pledges. And then, silence. Until the next round of killings. Benue’s tragedy is no longer local. It is a mirror reflecting a nation that has grown numb to the routine of bloodshed.

Nigeria’s security crisis has moved beyond sporadic outbursts; it is now entrenched—systemic, recurring, and terrifying in its predictability. Seven years ago, then-President Muhammadu Buhari stood on similar ground.

He had come to console grieving families in Logo and Guma after 70 villagers were killed in the New Year’s Day attacks of 2018. He came with promises. Yet, the killings never ceased. The bullets never stopped flying. And the graves kept multiplying.

President Tinubu may have spoken more frankly during his recent visit, but his words echoed the same tired script. Nigerians have heard it all before. Strong words. Somber meetings. New committees. And still, nothing changes.

This time, however, someone broke the ritual of polite silence. Professor James Ayatse, the Tor Tiv and Chairman of the Benue State Council of Traditional Rulers, stood before the president and refused to play along.

He rejected the lazy labels of “herder-farmer clashes” and “communal disputes.” He spoke with the clarity that many in power have lacked. “It is not herder-farmers clashes, it is not communal clashes, it is not reprisal attacks. This is a calculated, well-planned, full-scale genocidal invasion and land-grabbing campaign.”

The Tor Tiv’s words pierced the fog of official denial. His voice rose not only against the killers, but against a system that refuses to name the crime and confront the truth. His rebuke also extended to Governor Hyacinth Alia, a fellow Tiv man, who downplayed the crisis as either the work of foreigners or local conflicts.

The monarch’s frustration was as raw as it was justified. If there is no quarrel, what exactly is the government pretending to mediate? President Tinubu met with stakeholders. He gave orders. He assembled a new committee of elders. Yet, the cycle is unbroken.

Read Also:

  • Trade Facilitation: WCO, WBG Train Customs on Post-Clearance Audit
  • Trump Unveils Controversial ‘Board of Peace’ With $1bn Entry Fee
  • Operation FANSAN YAMMA Troops Eliminate Terrorist, Recover Arms in North West Offensive

The blood in Wannune had barely dried before the police dismissed the attack, calling it the act of a lone gunman and branding social media reports as misleading. But to survivors, these distinctions mean nothing. When your village is in flames, it matters little whether the attackers are bandits, terrorists, or so-called herders.

So long as leaders continue to mislabel the violence, real solutions will remain out of reach. So long as blame is shifted to the victims, the perpetrators grow bolder. And justice continues to walk on crutches—if it walks at all.

In a previous article of yours truly, titled: “Tinubu, Benue and When Empathy Comes the Funeral,” I warned about the futility of visits without vision, sympathy without structure. That warning has now become a grim reality. Worsening the situation is the abysmal funding of Nigeria’s internal security systems.

The Minister of Interior, Dr. Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo, recently described the country’s security budget as “a national embarrassment” and “a joke.” He questioned how any serious nation could protect over 4,000 kilometres of borders with less than N10 billion allocated to capital projects for border security.

“There is intelligence, but there’s no structure to make sense of it,” he warned. “That’s a dangerous place to be.” He is not alone in sounding the alarm. Nigeria’s Chief of Defence Staff, General Christopher Musa, has called for urgent physical border barriers similar to those constructed by Pakistan and Saudi Arabia.

Our porous frontiers—lined with over 1,400 illegal entry points—have become highways for foreign fighters, arms smugglers, and extremist ideologies. Yet, only a fraction of the official posts are equipped with modern surveillance tools. The result? Violence flows into places like Benue unchecked, and communities are left to fend for themselves while the state looks the other way.

What is happening in Benue is not a flare-up. It is a firestorm. And it threatens the very foundation of the Nigerian state. The graves in Guma, Logo, Daudu, and Wannune may lie in the Middle Belt, but their shadows stretch across the country. Enough of press statements. Enough of temporary deployments.

What Nigeria needs now is political will backed by resources. Truth-telling backed by structure. Localised intelligence backed by lasting reform. Until that happens, presidential visits will continue to offer only fleeting comfort.

And the Nigerian state will remain what it has become to so many grieving communities—a face that shows up late, and leaves too soon.

*Kabir Abdulsalam writes from Abuja. He can be reached via: [email protected].*

VISIT OUR OTHER WEBSITES
PRNigeria.com EconomicConfidential.com PRNigeria.com/Hausa/
EmergencyDigest.com PoliticsDigest.ng TechDigest.ng
HealthDigest.ng SpokesPersonsdigest.com TeensDigest.ng
ArewaAgenda.com Hausa.ArewaAgenda.com YAShuaib.com
  • TAGS
  • Gen. Christopher Musa
  • James Ayatse
  • Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo
  • President Bola Ahmed Tinubu
  • Saudi Arabia
  • Tor Tiv
  • Wannune
Previous articleFani-Kayode Hails Iran’s Military Response, Describes Outcome as Israel’s Worst Defeat in History
Next articleCitizens Group: El-Rufai’s Outburst Against Tinubu Rooted in Ministerial Snub
Kabir Abdulsalam
Kabir Abdulsalam
Xing

RELATED ARTICLESMORE FROM AUTHOR

(DICON), DG Major General Babatunde Alaya (DCG), Dera Nnadi during courtesy visit in line with (AFRIDECS)

Nigeria Customs Backs Africa’s First Defence and Security Exhibition

Adewale Adeniyi Bashir, Comptroller General of Customs (CGC)

Trade Facilitation: WCO, WBG Train Customs on Post-Clearance Audit

Trump Unveils Controversial ‘Board of Peace’ With $1bn Entry Fee

Operation FANSAN YAMMA Troops Eliminate Terrorist, Recover Arms in North West Offensive

FG Appoints 2 Deputy Corps Marshals for Southeast, Northeast to Boost Operations 

Army, DIA Operatives Arrest Suspected Gun Runners, Recover Weapons in Taraba

Terrorists bomb-laden vehicles destroyed by Nigerian Troops

Troops Neutralise 12 Terrorists in  Sambisa, Mandara Mountains, Recover Firearms, Motorcycles

Customs Disowns Fake Recruitment Flyer, Warns Public Against Fraudsters

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu

 Tinubu Names New Ambassadors to France, US, UK, and Turkey

Troops of Nigerian Army after successfully foiling an ambush by Boko Haram/ISWAP Terrorists

Troops Kill Suspected Boko Haram Fighter, Recover Arms in Maiduguri Operation

NJC Recommends FHC Chief Registrar, Suleiman Amida Hassan, 13 Others for Judges

Chief of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Waidi Shaibu receiving the Federal Commissioner of the National Commission for Refugees, Migrants and Internally Displaced Persons, Dr Tijani Aliyu Ahmed,

COAS Pledges Continued Army Support for Refugees, IDPs

Recent Posts

  • Nigeria Customs Backs Africa’s First Defence and Security Exhibition
  • Trade Facilitation: WCO, WBG Train Customs on Post-Clearance Audit
  • Trump Unveils Controversial ‘Board of Peace’ With $1bn Entry Fee
  • Operation FANSAN YAMMA Troops Eliminate Terrorist, Recover Arms in North West Offensive
  • FG Appoints 2 Deputy Corps Marshals for Southeast, Northeast to Boost Operations 
  • Home
  • About
  • Adverts
  • Contact
© 2020 PRNigeria. All Rights Reserved.
Latest News
Trade Facilitation: WCO, WBG Train Customs on Post-Clearance AuditTrump Unveils Controversial ‘Board of Peace’ With $1bn Entry FeeOperation FANSAN YAMMA Troops Eliminate Terrorist, Recover Arms in North West OffensiveFG Appoints 2 Deputy Corps Marshals for Southeast, Northeast to Boost Operations Army, DIA Operatives Arrest Suspected Gun Runners, Recover Weapons in TarabaTroops Neutralise 12 Terrorists in  Sambisa, Mandara Mountains, Recover Firearms, MotorcyclesCustoms Disowns Fake Recruitment Flyer, Warns Public Against Fraudsters Tinubu Names New Ambassadors to France, US, UK, and TurkeyTroops Kill Suspected Boko Haram Fighter, Recover Arms in Maiduguri OperationNJC Recommends FHC Chief Registrar, Suleiman Amida Hassan, 13 Others for JudgesCOAS Pledges Continued Army Support for Refugees, IDPsREVEALED: Why S'Court Dismissed Lagos Gov't Appeal Against Al-Mustapha Over Murder of Kudirat AbiolaNigerian Navy Explores Cutting-Edge Maritime Tech at Qatar Defence ExpoBaze University Architecture Students Engage Public Sector Clients in 2026 Live ProjectUS, Nigeria Deepen Cooperation Against Terror Groups
X whatsapp