Fulani Group Questions US Stance on Nigeria's Insecurity Crisis
Fulani Group Questions US Stance on Nigeria Insecurity

A group identifying as The Concerned Fulani People of Nigeria has expressed concerns over what it perceives as inconsistencies in the United States' evolving stance on insecurity in Nigeria, particularly regarding allegations of Fulani militancy and the treatment of Fulani herders.

In a rejoinder signed by Ibrahim Barkindo Chubado and made available to journalists on Wednesday, the group questioned the repeated back-and-forth posture of the United States on Nigeria's security challenges. According to the statement, earlier assessments reportedly linked to the U.S. government had cautioned against portraying the Fulani ethnic group as the sole source of insecurity in Nigeria or as an enemy of the state.

The group claimed that previous U.S. reports rejected sweeping accusations against Fulani communities, describing such narratives as politically motivated and lacking factual balance. It added that those reports also warned against ethnic profiling and generalizations capable of escalating communal tensions.

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The statement recalled that these earlier assessments emerged during the administration of former President Muhammadu Buhari, when public narratives around insecurity frequently linked incidents of kidnapping, banditry, and violent crimes to Fulani identity or Islam. According to the group, this trend contributed to widespread hostility toward innocent Fulani communities in parts of Southern Nigeria and the North-Central region.

The statement alleged that several Fulani settlements were attacked during that period, while businesses were destroyed and cattle killed because of ethnic profiling and misdirected retaliatory sentiments. It further argued that conflicts involving herders and farmers were often oversimplified in public discourse, despite security experts repeatedly pointing to underlying causes such as land disputes, environmental pressures, grazing routes, and local political tensions.

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