Opinion

The Nigeria US Story on Genocide- Ismail Auwal

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<p><&excl;-- BEGIN THEIA POST SLIDER --><&sol;p>&NewLine;<&excl;-- WP QUADS Content Ad Plugin v&period; 2&period;0&period;95 -->&NewLine;<div class&equals;"quads-location quads-ad4" id&equals;"quads-ad4" style&equals;"float&colon;none&semi;margin&colon;0px&semi;">&NewLine;&NewLine;<&sol;div>&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p><div class&equals;"rKEIMGId" style&equals;"clear&colon;both&semi;float&colon;left&semi;width&colon;100&percnt;&semi;margin&colon;0 0 20px 0&semi;"><script async src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;pagead2&period;googlesyndication&period;com&sol;pagead&sol;js&sol;adsbygoogle&period;js"><&sol;script> &NewLine;<&excl;-- TV --> &NewLine;<ins class&equals;"adsbygoogle" &NewLine; style&equals;"display&colon;block" &NewLine; data-ad-client&equals;"ca-pub-4403533287178375" &NewLine; data-ad-slot&equals;"4399361195" &NewLine; data-ad-format&equals;"auto" &NewLine; data-full-width-responsive&equals;"true"><&sol;ins> &NewLine;<script> &NewLine; &lpar;adsbygoogle &equals; window&period;adsbygoogle &vert;&vert; &lbrack;&rsqb;&rpar;&period;push&lpar;&lbrace;&rcub;&rpar;&semi; &NewLine;<&sol;script><&sol;div>&NewLine;<p>By Ismail Auwal<&sol;p><div class&equals;"4zDlKNai" style&equals;"clear&colon;both&semi;float&colon;left&semi;width&colon;100&percnt;&semi;margin&colon;0 0 20px 0&semi;"><script async src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;pagead2&period;googlesyndication&period;com&sol;pagead&sol;js&sol;adsbygoogle&period;js"><&sol;script> &NewLine;<&excl;-- TV --> &NewLine;<ins class&equals;"adsbygoogle" &NewLine; style&equals;"display&colon;block" &NewLine; data-ad-client&equals;"ca-pub-4403533287178375" &NewLine; data-ad-slot&equals;"4399361195" &NewLine; data-ad-format&equals;"auto" &NewLine; data-full-width-responsive&equals;"true"><&sol;ins> &NewLine;<script> &NewLine; &lpar;adsbygoogle &equals; window&period;adsbygoogle &vert;&vert; &lbrack;&rsqb;&rpar;&period;push&lpar;&lbrace;&rcub;&rpar;&semi; &NewLine;<&sol;script><&sol;div>&NewLine;<p>When a country is placed on Americas Countries of Particular Concern &lpar;CPC&rpar; list&comma; it never remains a technical diplomatic category&period; It becomes a permanent shadow that trails the nation into investment discussions&comma; military cooperation and the private rooms where powerful actors decide who to trust&period; Nigeria now carries that shadow&comma; and for a country already overwhelmed by multiple security emergencies&comma; the weight of this designation is neither abstract nor symbolic&period; It is political&comma; economic and potentially destabilising&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;The most worrying aspect is that the designation rests on a narrative that fractures upon contact with reality&colon; the claim that Nigeria is enabling a Christian genocide&period; It is a narrative that sounds coherent in Washingtons hearing rooms&comma; where testimonies are polished and emotions are guided&period; Yet once you step away from those rooms and into the communities where violence shapes the rhythm of daily life&comma; the story changes completely&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>A Narrative Travelling Faster Than Truth<br &sol;>&NewLine;The genocide narrative spreads quickly because it offers a clean explanation for a crisis that is anything but clean&period; It moves through congressional hearings&comma; diaspora networks&comma; lobbying circles and social-media echo chambers that seldom include those who bury their loved ones at dawn&period; In those distant spaces&comma; the narrative feels straightforward and morally comfortable&comma; but on Nigerian soil&comma; it dissolves into a far more complex and painful reality&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;In Zamfara&comma; over four hundred villages&comma; mostly Muslim&comma; have been emptied by bandits who kill for profit and control&comma; not in the name of faith&period; In Katsina and Sokoto&comma; entire communities have disappeared from maps&comma; destroyed by criminal groups with no ideological agenda&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;In Plateau&comma; twenty-five Muslim travellers were dragged from their vehicles and murdered in broad daylight by mobs from nearby Christian communities&period; In Anambra&comma; Harira Jibril&comma; pregnant and exhausted&comma; was killed alongside her four children simply because gunmen identified them as Muslims&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;These stories do not erase the suffering of Christian families who face similar horrors&period; Instead&comma; they reveal what the genocide narrative refuses to confront&colon; the violence in Nigeria does not travel in one direction&period; It shifts according to geography&comma; vulnerability&comma; and an almost two-decade-long crack in the state&&num;8217&semi;s security architecture&period; Just as Muslims do not assign collective guilt to Christians&comma; Christians cannot assign collective blame to all Muslims for the crimes of extremists who misuse faith&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Where the Evidence Falls Apart<br &sol;>&NewLine;Genocide is not a rhetorical weapon&semi; it is a legal term defined by intent&period; It requires a deliberate plan to exterminate a group of people because of who they are&period; Nigerias conflict landscape does not support that claim&period; In the North East&comma; Boko Haram targets Christians and Muslims alike&comma; killing clerics who oppose extremism&comma; villagers who refuse allegiance and children caught in crossfire&period; More than two million peopleof mixed faithslive in displacement camps&comma; united not by creed but by vulnerability&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;In the North West&comma; the violence is driven by banditry&comma; ransom economies and territorial capture&period; Armed groups raid for money&comma; power and fear&comma; not ideology&comma; and their victims are overwhelmingly Muslim&period; In the Middle Belt&comma; a different logic governs the conflict&colon; old land disputes&comma; generational grievances and cycles of retaliation&period; More than ten thousand people have been killed across Plateau&comma; Benue&comma; Katsina and Kebbi in just two years&comma; yet none of these killings reflect a coordinated national extermination plan&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Across the country&comma; the devastation is staggering&colon; thousands of villages razed&comma; millions displaced and livelihoods erased&period; Still&comma; no pattern points to state-sponsored religious cleansing&period; Nigerias crisis is a knot of collapsing borders&comma; unregulated weapons&comma; drug-fuelled gangs&comma; under-resourced security forces and abandoned communities struggling to survive without the protection of their own government&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<&excl;-- WP QUADS Content Ad Plugin v&period; 2&period;0&period;95 -->&NewLine;<div class&equals;"quads-location quads-ad1" id&equals;"quads-ad1" style&equals;"float&colon;none&semi;margin&colon;0px&semi;">&NewLine;&NewLine;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div class&equals;"M383tnal" style&equals;"clear&colon;both&semi;float&colon;left&semi;width&colon;100&percnt;&semi;margin&colon;0 0 20px 0&semi;"><script async src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;pagead2&period;googlesyndication&period;com&sol;pagead&sol;js&sol;adsbygoogle&period;js"><&sol;script> &NewLine;<ins class&equals;"adsbygoogle" &NewLine; style&equals;"display&colon;block&semi; text-align&colon;center&semi;" &NewLine; data-ad-layout&equals;"in-article" &NewLine; data-ad-format&equals;"fluid" &NewLine; data-ad-client&equals;"ca-pub-4403533287178375" &NewLine; data-ad-slot&equals;"6550225277"><&sol;ins> &NewLine;<script> &NewLine; &lpar;adsbygoogle &equals; window&period;adsbygoogle &vert;&vert; &lbrack;&rsqb;&rpar;&period;push&lpar;&lbrace;&rcub;&rpar;&semi; &NewLine;<&sol;script><&sol;div>&NewLine;<p>When Foreign Narratives Replace Local Truth<br &sol;>&NewLine;The danger begins when a single narrative becomes the only lens through which a country is understood&period; Sympathy for Christian victims is legitimate&comma; but when that sympathy becomes exclusive&comma; Muslim victims vanish entirely from the story&period; Their widows do not appear in Washington&period; Their mass graves do not trend&period; Their displacement does not register in global reports&period; A national tragedy becomes a one-directional script&comma; and in that script&comma; the failures of governance disappear behind the simplified idea of religious persecution&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Once this misdiagnosed story takes root in Washington&comma; policies begin to bend around it&period; Sanctions are proposed as moral pressure&period; Restrictions on arms sales are framed as accountability&period; Intervention is whispered as a last resort&period; These policies do not ask whether the next life at risk belongs to a Christian grandmother in Zangon Kataf or a Muslim farmer in Zurmi&period; They strike everyone equally&comma; often worsening insecurity for those already living at the edge of danger&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;The Grief That Defines the Crisis<br &sol;>&NewLine;In Kaduna&comma; three years ago&comma; I sat with a widow who lost her husband in a night attack&period; She did not know the attackers or their motives&period; All she knew was that when gunshots shattered the silence&comma; no one came to helpnot the nearby police post&comma; not the patrol team she had been assured would protect them&comma; not the state she believed would stand between her family and danger&period; Her grief was neither Christian nor Muslim&period; It was the grief of a Nigerian who discovered&comma; in one devastating moment&comma; that she was on her own&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Her story echoes across northern Nigeria&period; In Katsina&comma; a man from Dansadau recounted how bandits demanded a &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;tax” of ₦200&comma;000 in exchange for peace&period; When villagers failed to pay&comma; the killings began&comma; farms were abandoned&comma; and hunger forced families across the border&period; Over eighty thousand Nigerians now live as refugees in Niger’s Maradi region&comma; while nearly four hundred thousand are displaced across Kaduna&comma; Kano&comma; Katsina&comma; Sokoto and Zamfara&period; Many do not appear in the data of Washington because they are Muslims&quest;<br &sol;>&NewLine;They sleep in classrooms&comma; abandoned buildings&comma; unfinished shops and borrowed compounds&period; Their lives are held together by resilience and charity&comma; not by state protection&period; From Plateau to Benue to Zamfara&comma; the scenes repeat themselves&colon; midnight escapes&comma; separated families&comma; villages negotiating with bandits and people surviving despite the government&comma; not because of it&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<&excl;-- WP QUADS Content Ad Plugin v&period; 2&period;0&period;95 -->&NewLine;<div class&equals;"quads-location quads-ad5" id&equals;"quads-ad5" style&equals;"float&colon;none&semi;margin&colon;0px&semi;">&NewLine;&NewLine;<&sol;div>&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>A Crisis Rooted in State Fragility<br &sol;>&NewLine;Nigerias emergency is not a religious war&semi; it is a terrifying manifestation of state fragility&period; Borders allow weapons to flow freely&period; Security forces operate with broken vehicles and empty fuel tanks&period; Criminal groups evolve faster than government responses&period; In many villages&comma; the most powerful authority is the local bandit leader&comma; not the state&period; Communities negotiate peace at gunpoint&comma; surrender parts of their harvest as taxes and accept rules imposed by criminals because the state is too weak to govern&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;This is not the blueprint of genocide&period; It is the anatomy of state failure&period; And it is state failurenot a government-backed religious missionthat is killing Nigerians of all identities&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Reclaiming Nigerias Story<br &sol;>&NewLine;Nigeria cannot allow outsiders to dictate the meaning of its suffering&period; Foreign partners may care&comma; but they must care responsibly&period; A misdiagnosed story in Washington becomes a policy&comma; a policy becomes a precedent&comma; and a precedent becomes a long-term obstacle to Nigerias security and development&period; Sanctions&comma; arms restrictions and diplomatic isolation hit the vulnerable hardest&comma; not the architects of state weakness&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;This is why Nigeria must insist on telling its whole truth&period; A truth that honours Christian and Muslim victims equally&period; A truth that identifies governance collapsenot religious persecutionas the central driver of violence&period; A truth that demands stronger institutions&comma; better security responses and international partnerships rooted in accuracy&comma; not ideology&period; If Nigeria does not reclaim its story&comma; others will continue telling it badly&comma; and when the wrong story becomes the worlds truth&comma; the decisions that follow may be ones Nigeria&comma; in its fragile state&comma; cannot survive&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><&excl;-- END THEIA POST SLIDER -->&NewLine;<&excl;-- WP QUADS Content Ad Plugin v&period; 2&period;0&period;95 -->&NewLine;<div class&equals;"quads-location quads-ad4" id&equals;"quads-ad4" style&equals;"float&colon;none&semi;margin&colon;0px&semi;">&NewLine;&NewLine;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<script async src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;pagead2&period;googlesyndication&period;com&sol;pagead&sol;js&sol;adsbygoogle&period;js"><&sol;script> &NewLine;<ins class&equals;"adsbygoogle" &NewLine; style&equals;"display&colon;block" &NewLine; data-ad-format&equals;"autorelaxed" &NewLine; data-ad-client&equals;"ca-pub-4403533287178375" &NewLine; data-ad-slot&equals;"1004305389"><&sol;ins> &NewLine;<script> &NewLine; &lpar;adsbygoogle &equals; window&period;adsbygoogle &vert;&vert; &lbrack;&rsqb;&rpar;&period;push&lpar;&lbrace;&rcub;&rpar;&semi; &NewLine;<&sol;script>&NewLine;<&excl;-- WP QUADS Content Ad Plugin v&period; 2&period;0&period;95 -->&NewLine;<div class&equals;"quads-location quads-ad3" id&equals;"quads-ad3" style&equals;"float&colon;none&semi;margin&colon;0px&semi;">&NewLine;&NewLine;<&sol;div>&NewLine;&NewLine;

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