'Peace is a gradual thing': How land, cattle and identity fuel a deadly Nigerian conflict
'Peace is a gradual thing': How land, cattle and identity fuel a deadly Nigerian conflict 5 hours ago Alex LastPlateau state "Around midnight, I heard the first gunshots," recalls Joseph Ize Zino, a youth leader in central Nigeria.
"All of us in the house, we ran.
"You hear gunshots and people screaming, begging. "
A total of 52 men, women and children were killed that night in April 2025.
It is not clear exactly who was responsible.
It's nothing but a pure genocide.
I call it the pure genocide of Christians.
They want to wipe us off and then grab the land. "
Muslim communities in northern Nigeria, where they are the majority population, have largely borne the brunt of attacks by Islamist militants like Boko Haram and heavily armed gangs.
But Christian minorities there have been victims too.
On Christmas Day, the US launched missile strikes at suspected Islamist hideouts in the north-west.
Still the violence in central Nigeria remains a focus for some US politicians.
Recently, Christian communities say they have borne the brunt of the attacks.
The conflict in Plateau has its own dynamics.
The state has historic links to American missionaries.
It is home to more than 50 ethnic groups.
Christians are the majority, but many here are Muslim too.
For decades, local politicians have sought power by playing on ethnic and religious identity.
While those considered "settlers" include many from Muslim communities, like the Fulani, even if they have lived on the land for generations.
The violence spread to the countryside and many different ethnic groups were drawn in.
"The Irigwe youth just went into our settlements and set them on fire.
Fifty-two of our people were killed. "
He says most Fulanis living in Irigwe areas were forced to flee.
But he says the violence has continued.
Just a few months ago, his son was killed in an ambush on his way back from work.
"More recently, it has been random killings.
Ambushes, where they kill one here, two there, three here," he says.
"They attack those of us they consider settlers. "
But for Wada Waziri, it is not principally a religious conflict.
It is about politics, ethnicity and competition for resources, as well as simple criminality.
There is little security presence in the countryside.
Few people are ever prosecuted for the violence, creating a culture of reprisal.
We are living in constant fear, because anything can happen," he says.
Nigeria has a huge population of Muslims and Christians, who largely live in peace.
Even in Plateau, the violence is not universal.
Not far away from Zike lies the town of Mista Ali.
"Everybody is living in peace and we don't have any problem with anybody.
All of us live in peace," says Chief Dr Danladi Akinga Kasuwa.
He is a Christian and a traditional ruler among the Pengana peoples.
Out on the streets of Mista Ali, he is greeted wherever he goes.
"Muslim, Christian, no problem.
The Fulani are our brothers, the indigenes are our brothers, all," he says.
Ever since, they have kept a lid on the conflict.
"I don't tolerate nonsense," he tells me.
"If we see anybody trying to bring problem we arrest him.
"No tribalism, no sentiment or different religions. "
But it is hard to keep the peace.
A core source of conflict is competition for the land.
It is an issue across Nigeria, that often pits farmers against herders, irrespective of faith.
So even small disputes can inflame old divisions or trigger new ones.
He says a cow is worth around 1m naira ($700; £500).
"I love to be with my cattle. "
Traditionally there was a symbiotic relationship between herders and farmers.
Cows would graze on farms after the harvest and their manure would help fertilise the land.
In conflict areas, farmers have accused herders of deliberately destroying crops.
While herders' precious cattle have been killed and stolen.
"Many other tribes, they are attacking us," says Isa.
"They started attacking us, shooting our cattle with guns.
I tried to escape too because I was very scared.
I have no way to defend myself," he says.
When the shooting was over, Isa found his brother had been shot dead.
"It's not that I want revenge, no," says Isa. "
But among Fulanis here, there is not much trust in the authorities.
"Fulanis are being killed, their cows killed, their cows rustled.
The government does not say anything.
And the media don't expose what is happening to us. "
He rejects accusations that the Fulani are waging any kind of religious war in Plateau.
He says it is a farmer-herder conflict but only the Fulani are being blamed for the violence.
"I think when justice is done, we can have peace in Plateau state. "
But that sense of persecution and injustice is a sentiment shared by all sides of the conflict.
And each accuses the other of forcing people off the land.
It is an attack ground," he says.
He sees it as part of a concerted Fulani plan: "Our casualties are more.
They have taken over a large area.
"The little crops we farm are being destroyed by the Fulani.
We want to reclaim our farms. "
In response, the government has launched peace initiatives and has promised to boost security.
There have been mediation and peace deals.
When it comes to peace, the elders are the ones who tend to do the talking.
They can have considerable influence.
But it is the young people who do the fighting.
Many have only known conflict.
Armed by their leaders, some now have their own agendas and criminality has thrived.
"So when there is conflict, it is them that run the space. "
In a ploughed field, a group of villagers are planting seed potatoes.
"We are all together, Berom and Fulani," says Amos, a Berom farmer.
We want to live together in peace like it was before. "
Next to him stands, Abdullahi, a Fulani friend.
BBC/Alex Last BBC/Alex Last "We enjoy being with them.
We are cracking jokes together.
We cannot achieve anything without peace," he says.
The violence in Plateau has its own dynamics.
But insecurity has blighted much of rural Nigeria.
So in the meantime, it is left to people like Abdullahi and Amos to try to make their own peace.
"We have started to see change," says Abdullahi.
Amos agrees: "Peace is a gradual thing that you build and build.
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