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Defending ourselves against atrocities, By Jibrin Ibrahim

byJibrin Ibrahim
August 9, 2025
Reading Time: 5 mins read
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This week, the Zamfara terrorism kingpin, Bello Turji, released 32 kidnapped persons and agreed to stop attacking farmers, following a series of meetings with some Islamic clerics in his hideout. This was disclosed by Musa Yusuf, a cleric popularly known as Asadus-Sunnah, who revealed the development at a religious gathering on Monday in Kaduna. Terrorist Turji was also reported to have surrendered some of his arms after the meeting. The freed persons, including children and women, had spent about four months in captivity. Some of the women gave birth in captivity, while one suffered a snake bite. Mr Yusuf said the clerics were still trying to persuade Mr Turji to accept total peace, but they did not ask him to surrender all his arms so as not to make him vulnerable to attack by other groups opposed to the peace process in the state. The cleric commended President Bola Tinubu, the National Security Adviser (NSA), Nuhu Ribadu, the Governor of Zamfara State, Dauda Lawal, and Senator Shehu Buba for supporting a non-kinetic approach in addressing the security challenges of the area. Clearly therefore, the process is sanctioned by the Nigerian State.

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In January this year, the Nigerian military announced the killing of the second-in-command to the said Bello Turji, one Aminu Kanawa as well as his son. The army spokesperson said several of Mr Turji’s key commanders, including Abu Dan Shehu, Jabbi Dogo, Dan Kane, Basiru Yellow, Kabiru Gebe, Bello Buba, and Dan Inna Kahon-Saniya-Yafi-Bahaushe, were killed in the operations. Furthermore, troops were said to have neutralised over 24 fleeing terrorists from Turji’s camp around Gebe and Isa Local Government Areas of Sokoto State, as well as around Gidan Rijiya in Shinkafi Local Government Area of Zamfara. Clearly, terrorist Turji and his gang have been under severe pressure for some time and his search for reconciliation means he needs time to recover and recuperate from the pressure.

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It has happened repeatedly over the past few years. When the terrorists are under severe pressure from the security agencies, they offer to negotiate and talk peace. They do not forget to demand and secure a financial package for agreeing to peace. They use the period of the truce to recover, buy new arms from the vast amounts of money they have been extorting from the people and when they feel strong again, they resume their atrocities against the security forces and innocent civilians. I now feel that the Nigerian State and the people need to engage in deeper reflection on the most effective path to peace. Opportunistic peace accords when terrorists are under pressure to allow them time to rebuild and strengthen their forces cannot be the way to peace.

The State must also consider what the people feel. These terrorists kill people, burn down their villages, rape women and girls, kidnap people and keep the for months while their relations sell their property, land, animals to raise money for ransom. The atrocities committed by these terrorists are destroying communities, dehumanizing people, impoverishing them and creating millions of internally displaced people living in hardship and squalor. Are these victims consulted when these peace negotiations are conducted?

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My view has always been that the apparent success of terrorists in holding the country to ransom is not a sign of their strength but an expression of the weakness of State and society in contemporary Nigeria. The insurgency that has been on-going is a statement about the high level of public corruption. When government decides to bribe terrorists, it is because some people within government have decided to pocket most of the money. Have we not heard many cases in which the terrorists have complained some government officials stole the money that was set aside for their pay off? If religious radicalism found it easy to organise an insurgency against the State, is it not because religious education and authority had broken down within society? If young Nigerians feel justified in procuring arms and using them against State and society, is it not because of the breakdown of the social contract and the collapse of moral authority as mass poverty and penury on the one hand sees illegitimate wealth accumulated and displayed in a vulgar manner on the other side?

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The danger is that it has now been almost two decades of perpetrating atrocities against innocent civilians and we are losing our humanity. Human beings are often slaughtered like rams. Bombs are attached to small girls sent to bomb people in their places of worship. Girls are kidnapped and their parents told they would be raped daily until they pay ransom. This type of behaviour is destroying our civilisation in a very profound manner and is creating a new social order in which the Kalashnikov is king and the new god is money obtained without hard work, ethics or morals. What would be the future for our society?

As our society and values disintegrate, we begin to lose our intellectual capacity to understand what is happening. We become ready to believe absurdities that one group – the evil Fulani are responsible for all our woes as if there is an ethnic group in Nigeria without its own share of bandits and killers. It was Voltaire, the French philosopher who made the point that “those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities.” It is indeed the case that so many among our youth have turned their back on the religious education and socialisation they received from their parents and have been trained to commit mass atrocities. There are objective reasons why terrorists engage in mass atrocities. First, they create fear among the people and the forces they are confronting by making them believe that the outcome of engagement would be terrible suffering and painful death. Secondly, the terrorists who have committed atrocities break the bond with their society, and in this case, their religious group to which they know they cannot return and become bonded with the terrorist group.

The terrorists then become more lucid than the rest of society and start running rings around us. Boko Haram for example learnt to commit atrocities against different categories to achieve specific objections. They attack and kill Christians to encourage the emergence of confessional war with Islam that would divert energies and emotions to make the attainment of their own political objectives easier. They attack Islamic scholars who criticise them so that the absurdities of their belief would not be exposed to their members. They attack Muslims praying in mosques to convince their members that other Muslims are not real Muslims and deserve death. They attack schools, teachers and learning to block the development of critical thinking while promoting obscurantism. They attack traditional rulers who are also religious leaders to legitimise their own religious authority as the only valid one. They attack public servants and security agencies as part of their deconstruction and destruction of the State as we know it. Precisely because they are pursuing multiple objectives that are not only military and political but are also ideological, religious, social and familial, it is important that the response to their actions should also be multiple and emanate from various sources. They remain many steps ahead of the State in their strategies.

Terrorists are now home grown in all our communities and the profession has clearly become an equal opportunities practice. It is easy to justify when parallels are drawn with Nigeria’s official governing class. Which Nigerian is not aware that many governors, senators etc have a life history of criminality, drug dealing or financial crimes. As the two sides of the coin are compared by ordinary Nigerians, they see an extreme case of the absence of integrity and moral standing on both sides. No one is on the side of legitimacy and the public good. There are no good examples to point two. As this happens, most Nigerians revert into deeper and more devoted religious practice to save their own personal souls. As for the politicians, bandits and terrorists, they have signed their pact with the devil and decided their paradise will be here not the hereafter. If and when we develop philosophy, which we have never done in our history so far, we will see that this bifurcation between the good who will go to heaven and the bad who will turn the earth into their heaven is what is leading us ALL to PERDITION as much of our clergy is actually on the other side.

A professor of Political Science and development consultant/expert, Jibrin Ibrahim is a Senior Fellow of the Centre for Democracy and Development, and Chair of the Editorial Board of PREMIUM TIMES.

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