Close Menu
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Daily News Cover
  • Entertainment
  • Tech
  • More
    • Education
    • Opinion
    • Metro
    • Sports
  • Advert Rate
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Dangote’s petition: We’ll probe NMDPRA boss – ICPC
  • Niger Gov Bago sacks 30 advisers
  • Peller: Roads not filming locations – FRSC warns
  • Davido brought toxicity, rivalry to Nigerian music industry – Samklef claims
  • Why I don’t go to church – Rapper T.I
  • Buhari made other room joke on the wrong stage – Aisha
  • Nigeria vs Egypt: All you need to know about Super Eagles’ pre-AFCON friendly
  • AFCON 2025: Egypt to rest Salah, Marmoush for Super Eagles friendly
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Daily News HubDaily News Hub
  • News

    Nigeria’s World Cup hopes revived as DR Congo face player eligibility scrutiny

    December 16, 2025

    Tinubu ADC’s promotion suspended over ‘bad precedent’ concerns

    December 16, 2025

    Ex-CJN Tanko Muhammad dies at 71

    December 16, 2025

    Benin Republic coup: 30 soldiers, others jailed for treason, murder

    December 16, 2025

    ‘We are one big family,’ Ooni declares, installs Ghana’s President Mahama as Aare Atayeto Oodua

    December 16, 2025
  • Politics

    Niger Gov Bago sacks 30 advisers

    December 16, 2025

    Dr Girei’s wave of endorsements sweeps across Adamawa as over 1,000 coordinators gather to strategise

    December 16, 2025

    Tinubu will lose 2027 election – Senator Abaribe

    December 16, 2025

    How my alliance with Buhari resulted in Jonathan’s ouster, Tinubu recounts

    December 15, 2025

    Osun 2026: Najeem Salam clinches ADC governorship ticket

    December 15, 2025
  • Business

    Dangote’s petition: We’ll probe NMDPRA boss – ICPC

    December 16, 2025

    Petrol battlefield: Dangote, importers locked in brutal price war

    December 16, 2025

    Petrol price war turns dirty as Dangote accuses NMDPRA boss of paying $5m to children’s school in Switzerland

    December 15, 2025

    Dangote Refinery slashes fuel price by N129

    December 12, 2025

    FG pushes for N17.89tn new loans to finance 2026 budget

    December 11, 2025
  • Daily News Cover

    Hardship: Again, World Bank warns Tinubu against reversing reforms

    October 17, 2024

    Hardship: Atiku, Obi swoop on Tinubu as First Lady defends hubby

    October 10, 2024

    Rivers’ Day of Rage!

    October 7, 2024

    Police, #FearlessInOctober protesters set for showdown today

    September 30, 2024

    Guber poll loss:Edo Govt House ‘deserted,’ Obaseki ‘disappears’

    September 26, 2024
  • Entertainment

    Peller: Roads not filming locations – FRSC warns

    December 16, 2025

    Davido brought toxicity, rivalry to Nigerian music industry – Samklef claims

    December 16, 2025

    Why I don’t go to church – Rapper T.I

    December 16, 2025

    Buhari made other room joke on the wrong stage – Aisha

    December 16, 2025

    ‘I started smoking at 13, battled addictions for 27 years’ – Tonto Dike

    December 16, 2025
  • Tech

    Labubu, Natasha, Buhari lead Nigeria’s 2025 Google searches

    December 4, 2025

    Nigeria records highest weekly cyberattacks in Africa — Report

    December 4, 2025

    Paystack suspends co-founder, Ezra Olubi over sexual misconduct allegation

    November 14, 2025

    Circular Carbon Economy: A Case for the Review and Redefining Global Approach to Climate Action Strategies & A Just Energy Transition

    November 10, 2025

    AI in the workplace: Faleye advocates reinventing social protection

    October 12, 2025
  • More
    • Education
    • Opinion
    • Metro
    • Sports
  • Advert Rate
Daily News HubDaily News Hub
Home»News»Uromi Killings: When Fulani Terrorism Makes ‘Aboki’ An Endangered Species
News

Uromi Killings: When Fulani Terrorism Makes ‘Aboki’ An Endangered Species

Daily News HubBy Daily News HubApril 18, 2025No Comments
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

By
Felix Oboagwina

For some reason, President Muhammadu Buhari instructed security operatives to shoot on sighting anyone found in the forest bearing an AK47. It was his own way of responding to the frustrating tales of armed men rampantly visiting Nigerians with death, kidnapping, raping and plundering. In 2020, records showed armed bandits killed 2,539 Nigerians in 654 attacks. Some believe the figure undercounted actual casualties.

The 16 Northerners, identified as hunters who were lynched and burnt to death by an irate mob in Uromi, the quiet town of PDP’s Late Chief Tony Anenih and the Late Chief Anthony Enahoro who moved the first Motion for Nigeria’s Independence, may not all have borne AK47 assault rifles. But they fit other profiles of Fulani terrorists who had turned life in Edo State into a nightmare that necessitated locals to organise a vigilante team to safeguard the town at midnight.
They were Hausa-Fulani, alias “Aboki.” Southerners label any man from the Hausa-Fulani stock from the North or his cousin from other Sahelian region an “Aboki.”

They were strangers.
They possessed guns.
Over two dozen in number, they were travelling in a group, every one of them lying low, quiet and hidden underneath the tarpaulin of a Dangote Cement long-bed trailer. They were said to be travelling from Port Harcourt en route Edo State to celebrate the Eid-Il-Kabir Muslim festival with their families in Kano. The driver and motor-boy initially swore their vehicle conveyed only goods, until vigilantes discovered the hidden human cargoes.
More than anything else, carrying guns compromised their innocence. Less sophisticated than the AK47, the hunting guns the “hunters” bore, at least to the untrained eye, provoked the natives’ conclusion that these were the usual Fulani bad boys, whose kidnapping activities had turned Uromi and environs to hell. Native logic would say: “Gun na gun!” Don’t dane guns kill? Eyewitnesses insist some of the guns found on them were AK47s. On being detected, one of these hiding wayfarers reportedly stabbed an Uromi vigilante. Things quickly went south thenceforth. In retaliation, an irate mob of indigenes gathered and dispensed jungle justice instantly. Sixteen “Abokis” were burnt alive. Even then, indigenes saved 10 0thers from the mob attack.

It is a quite unfortunate situation. Fatal errors were made. Criminal foreign Fulani constitute the enemy, not these local Hausa-Fulani. Foreign Fulani terrorise even the local Fulani, who have become victims to the terrorism of their immigrant cousins. If, as the Abokis claimed, they were truly en route to Kano, all the Uromi vigilantes should have done was escort them to the border to ensure the strangers did not disappear into the shrubs to wreak havoc. If in doubt, hand them over to the authorities.
Fears of reprisals in the North have set the country on edge. President Bola Ahmed Tinubu not only issued a condemning statement, he ordered a manhunt for the Uromi mobsters. And they have been caught. Police say they have apprehended those behind the killing in a swift manhunt. No such manhunts have been launched or have unearthed Fulani terrorists killing in Niger, Enugu, Uzo-Uwani, Agatu, Edo, Kogi, Plateau and the entire Benue landscape. Not one.
Northern Emirs and governors have urged their citizens to show restraint even as they bayed for the killers’ blood for the shed blood. Edo’s Governor Monday Okpebholo immediately sacked the head of the state’s security outfit.
However, truth be told, Uromi-16 was an accident waiting to happen.

Like the rest of Esanland and Edo State, Uromi Town welcomes strangers. Hausa-Fulani “Abokis” rub shoulders with the locals as commercial motorbike “Okada” operators. They know the very nooks and crannies of the three traditional zones, Afenmailand, Edoland and Esanland. Hausas trade at their local markets, selling everything from onions, to beef, to goats, to torchlights, to textile. Locals patronise them indiscriminately in the spirit of one Nigeria and the global village. Up till this moment, locals would enter the bushes to make purchases of Fulani’s cows for ceremonies. Villagers randomly hire Northerners for farm labour.

However, as it happened in Ebonyi, Enugu, Agatu and other places, that fraternal symbiotic relationship quickly diminished. A few months back, Uromi women blocked the Benin-Auchi-Abuja highway to protest the dehumanising practices of the strangers. Locals were being raped in the farms. Abomination! Some women not only suffered rape, their rapists butchered them. Those resisting rape paid with death. Today, no Uromi or Esan woman goes to the farm alone. None! Some have abandoned farming altogether. Food prices have soared. Hunger bites like never before.
Like rampaging locusts, Fulani herders breeze into farms with their cattle and wipe out farmers’ sweat for an entire year. Their animals eat up plantings. As if that were not enough, these cowboys brazenly break down and break into barns of maize, yam, cassava, cocoyam and other stored produce that they feed to their cattle in a daredevil audacity. Farmers have been injured; many have been killed for resisting this wanton wastage of their plantings and harvests by these demons. News filters all over the place that if you touch these devourers, Nigerian troops and the Nigerian police, in the strangest twist to the entire affair, will swoop down upon the community, leaving the locals bathing in sorrows, tears and blood.

In fact, the thinking is rife that these hoodlums serve as foot-soldiers, an advance battalion for the Fulani hegemonists’ dream of conquering the entire Nigeria to create an Islamic Caliphate. That agenda some suspect informed the genocide in Christian-dominated Southern Kaduna.

That is the background to Uromi-16.
Not only do these terrorists thieve harvests, they steal people too. Kidnapping has become a nightmare. Locals are abducted at random on the roads, the farms and their beds. Not even palaces provide a safe haven.

One traditional ruler in Esanland, the Onojie of Uzea Kingdom, laments the brazenness of Fulani kidnappers. Narrating his and his people’s ordeal, Onojie Solomon Itoya Iluobe II said: “Our wives go to farm; they are raped by Fulani herdsmen and set ablaze.

“I have paid ransom multiple times to Fulani herdsmen. They kidnapped my sister and others from my palace. I don’t want Fulani herdsmen in my community and forest anymore.”
Such is the background to Uromi-16.

But the story is the same nationwide. It appears that the Fulani Sultanate in the North has exported its worst to other ethnic nationalities cohabiting in the Nigerian space. Allowed that the vast majority of Fulani keeps the law, however, bad eggs from that race have spoilt the whole basket. No one trusts the Fulani and the Aboki anymore. Time has come for Fulani kinsmen back home to summon these malevolent characters to return home for reorientation or for resettlement. Governor, Abubakar Ganduje nursed such a plan. It should be revived, adopted and implemented by Fulani majority states.

Muhammadu Buhari’s presidency worsened matters clearly. His eight years unfolded a Pan-Fulani agenda to invite his Fulani cousins from other nations to occupy Nigeria as their homestead. From 2015, under General “Pan-Fulani” Buhari’s regime, the Global Terrorism Index listed Fulani herdsmen as the fourth deadliest terrorist group in the world.

Does anyone have a monopoly of violence? No. Will Nigeria’s other 349 tribes and 190-210 million peace-loving Nigerians fold their arms and wait to be pillaged, slaughtered, terrorised and completely annihilated? No. They will rise up to contain an existential threat. And trust me, with a level playing field and with the authorities taking a neutral pose, Nigeria’s long-suffering non-Fulani 349 nationalities have the capacity to dispense as much violence against the foreign Fulani as they have suffered. Even security chiefs have advocated self-help and self-preservation because “nobody is coming to help you.” They counsel Nigeria to liberalise access to arms in this undeclared state of emergency. Why? Not only are the regular troops overwhelmed, the Military institution is compromised. In response have been formed the various state and regional security outfits: CJTF, Amotekun, Ebubeagwu, etc.

However, a violent country is not one Nigerians want. Their vision, as the words of the just discarded National Anthem said, is “one nation bound in freedom, peace and unity.”

Will a peaceful nation happen?
The answer boils down to the civilised Fulani telling their misguided kinsmen to lay down their criminality, their violence and their AK47s, and embrace peaceful coexistence with neighbours. Without that, as the Uromi episode shows, the Fulani, and any “Aboki” bearing any resemblance to him, might just end up as an endangered species anywhere he shows up. God forbid!

. OBOAGWINA IS AN AUTHOR, JOURNALIST AND PUBLISHER, REACHABLE VIA: foboagwina@gmail.com

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
Daily News Hub
  • Website

Related Posts

Nigeria’s World Cup hopes revived as DR Congo face player eligibility scrutiny

December 16, 2025

Tinubu ADC’s promotion suspended over ‘bad precedent’ concerns

December 16, 2025

Ex-CJN Tanko Muhammad dies at 71

December 16, 2025

Comments are closed.

Dangote’s petition: We’ll probe NMDPRA boss – ICPC

December 16, 2025

Niger Gov Bago sacks 30 advisers

December 16, 2025

Peller: Roads not filming locations – FRSC warns

December 16, 2025

Davido brought toxicity, rivalry to Nigerian music industry – Samklef claims

December 16, 2025

Why I don’t go to church – Rapper T.I

December 16, 2025

Buhari made other room joke on the wrong stage – Aisha

December 16, 2025
About Us
About Us

Daily Newshub is a general interest online newspaper with bias for reporting the news behind the news cutting across Politics, Business, Economy, General Interests, Crime and Human Interest stories, Features/Opinions, City, Entertainment and Sports.

© 2025 Daily News Hub. All Rights Reserved. Designed by DeedsTech.
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.