Fulani Terrorists Declare War Rooted in Prophet Mohammed's Jihad Teachings, Demand Nigerians Convert to Islam or Face Death
Fulani terrorists have reportedly declared that their war is rooted in the teachings of Prophet Mohammed on jihad, urging every Nigerian to convert to Islam or continue being slaughtered. The declaration has raised alarm among religious and community leaders.
Critics are questioning why some groups still claim to be proud citizens of Nigeria while terrorists openly plan to Islamize and kill.
@real_IpobDOS@radiobiafralive
This is a must watch. I was skeptical. But man, is it powerful.
It should be known that the director is grandchild of a federal army officer, who is interviewed extensively in the film. But it is certainly not propaganda in that direction.
There are points, where the history is over simplified, and in my view lean more towards the federal direction. There are hard decisions to make when producing a documentary, and I don’t attribute this to nefarious purposes, only a whiff of inherited bias. But it does not diminish the impact of this experience.
Watch it. Consider watching it with your children if they are mature enough. (Some parts are very hard to watch.) Send it to your friends. The world must see.
This is the start of a conversation. Now it is up to us to fill in the blanks and help people understand the same drivers, the same jihad, and that the same genocidal regime are still in force today.
#EarthShaker
https://t.co/G1pOyyK6ty
Ndigbo, this just happened in your homeland, in the vicinity of Ishiagu & Awgu, central Igboland. Who did it & number of casualties are all in the video. It’s indeed another tragedy.
TERRORISTS: Reportedly caught in Ibeju/Eleko axis of Lagos. Some say they were there to pick up ransom money, others say they were simply advancing to the new front - Lagos, and that there are many others.
💔 🇳🇬:Extremely Sensitive Content-
A baby was found still tied to the back of his dead mother, crying in the middle of a massacre in Kogi7Nigeria 🇳🇬
Everyone around him had been murdered
Fulani's Muslim terrorists are massacring Christians in Nigeria.
MAY 30: A DAY OF REMEMBRANCE, A DAY OF CONSCIENCE
REMEMBERING OUR HEROES AND
HEROINES OF BIAFRA (1967–1970).
REMEMBERING THE WORST GENOCIDE COMMITTED IN HUMAN HISTORY.
In Memory of the Countless Lives Lost During One of the Darkest Chapters in African History
Today, we stand in solemn remembrance.
We remember the fathers who never returned home.
We remember the mothers whose tears watered the soil of a wounded homeland.
We remember the young men and women whose dreams were extinguished before they had the opportunity to blossom.
We remember the innocent children whose fragile lives were consumed by hunger, disease, displacement and the devastating consequences of war.
Above all, we remember a people who, despite unimaginable suffering, refused to surrender their dignity, their identity, and their hope.
May 30 is not merely a date on a calendar. It is a solemn memorial. It is a day upon which history compels us to reflect upon the Nigerian Civil War, fought between 1967 and 1970, and the immense human tragedy that unfolded across Biafra enclaves.
For the Igbo people and many others who endured those turbulent years, the memories remain vivid and painful. Entire communities were uprooted. Families were separated. Villages were destroyed. Countless civilians perished from the direct consequences of warfare, starvation, disease and displacement.
We remember that, before the outbreak of full-scale hostilities, thousands of Eastern Nigerians, particularly Igbos, had already become victims of violence, consequently massacred, and reprisals in various parts of the country following the political crises and military coups of 1966, which they mischievously classified as “Igbo coup”. Many families fled back to Eastern Nigeria carrying little more than the trauma of survival and the memories of loved ones left behind.
When war eventually erupted in July 1967, it unleashed one of the gravest humanitarian catastrophes ever witnessed on the African continent. Images of malnourished children with protruding ribs and sunken eyes shocked the conscience of the world. The blockade imposed by the Nigerian Army during the war severely restricted the movement of food and humanitarian supplies into Biafra, contributing to widespread starvation and suffering among civilians.
History records that millions were displaced. History records that countless lives intonation of over 5 millions, were lost. History records that entire generations were scarred by the horrors of war.
And history must never be forgotten.
Among the most painful memories remains the Asaba Massacre of October 1967, where numerous civilians were brutally murdered under tragic circumstances. The scars of that event remain etched upon the collective memory of the people of Asaba and indeed the entire Igbo nation.
The dead cannot speak.
The starving children cannot testify.
The mothers who died in agony cannot return to tell their stories.
Yet the silence of their graves continues to speak to humanity.
It asks a simple but profound question:
How much suffering must a people endure before their pain is acknowledged?
How many generations must carry the burden of remembrance before truth is confronted with honesty and courage?
The tragedy of Biafra is not merely an Igbo story. It is a human story. It is a reminder of what occurs when political disagreements are allowed to descend into dehumanisation, collective punishment and the abandonment of our common humanity.
Even after the guns fell silent in January 1970 and the declaration of "No Victor, No Vanquished" was made, many survivors struggled to reconcile those noble words with the realities they encountered in the aftermath of the conflict.
For countless families, the end of the war did not immediately bring restoration. It brought the painful task of rebuilding shattered lives from the ruins of loss. Homes had been destroyed. Businesses painstakingly built over generations had vanished. Savings were wiped away. Livelihoods disappeared. Many who had once enjoyed stability and prosperity were compelled to begin life anew under extraordinarily difficult circumstances.
To many survivors, the scars of war did not end on the battlefield. They lingered in the economic hardships that followed, in the properties that were lost, in the opportunities that vanished, and in the enduring perception that an entire people continued to bear the heavy consequences of a conflict they had already paid for with immeasurable sacrifice.
For many Igbos, the post-war years became a prolonged struggle against not only material deprivation but also against the painful feeling that their suffering had neither been fully acknowledged nor adequately addressed. Generations grew up carrying stories of loss, displacement, sacrifice and resilience, stories passed from parents to children, not as instruments of bitterness, but as solemn reminders of a painful chapter that must never be forgotten.
History imposes a moral duty upon every nation: the duty to confront painful truths with honesty. A society achieves greatness not by burying its tragedies beneath silence, but by courageously acknowledging them, learning from them, and ensuring that such suffering never again befalls any people.
For this reason, remembrance remains necessary.
Not because we seek vengeance.
Not because we seek to perpetuate old grievances.
Rather, because remembrance is the foundation of truth, and truth is the foundation of reconciliation.
A wound that is denied cannot heal.
A tragedy that is forgotten can be repeated.
A people whose suffering is ignored can never experience complete reconciliation.
True healing requires more than the cessation of hostilities.
It requires acknowledgement.
It requires compassion.
It requires justice.
It requires historical honesty.
And above all, it requires the collective courage to affirm that every human life lost mattered, every child who perished mattered, every mother who wept mattered, and every community devastated by war deserves to be remembered with dignity.
The war officially ended in 1970.
But the obligation to remember remains.
The obligation to seek truth remains.
The obligation to pursue justice remains.
And the obligation to preserve the memory of the fallen remains eternal.
Today, therefore, we mourn.
Today, we remember.
Today, we honour.
And today, we reaffirm that the memories of those who perished shall never be erased from the pages of history.
May their sacrifices never be forgotten.
May their memories continue to inspire future generations.
May justice, truth and peace ultimately prevail.
Ozo-emezina!
#BiafraRemembranceDay
#May30Remembrance
#NeverForget
#RememberTheFallen
#TruthAndReconciliation
#JusticeForAll
#HonourTheHeroes
#BiafraHistory
#InMemoryOfTheFallen
#PeaceThroughJustice
#RemembranceAndHope
#Ozoemezina
#BarEjioforWrites
Signed
Sir Ifeanyi Ejiofor, Esq.,KSC
Dunu-Ezeugosinachi
May 30, 2026
Did you know? Federal Government troops under Col. Gado Nasko fired the first artillery shots into Biafra on July 6, 1967, at Garkem, in present-day Cross River State. That ignited the Biafran War.
May 30th Biafra Hero’s Remembrance Day Tribute: We Remember Our Fallen Heroes And Heroines Whose Sacrifices Will Forever Remain Etched In Our Hearts. Their Legacy Lives On.
#NeverForget#BiafraHeroesRemembranceDay
IPOB declares May 30 Biafra heroes remembrance day, urges sit-at-home reflection
The Indigenous People of Biafra, IPOB, has declared May 30, 2026, as a solemn day of remembrance for millions of people who lost their lives during the Nigerian civil war, describing the occasion as a period of reflection, mourning and honour for fallen Biafran heroes and heroines.
https://t.co/gVF9PcNn5N
Harry @trigottista will do his Bigotry finish but will still take out his time to;
1. Drag & Exposed the Nigerian Police till they actually fixed their Barracks.
2. Expose The Nigerian army when they Posted lies about Fake victory locations.
3. Make Ritual Trafficking esp in Ogun state a national front burner issue.
4. Constantly Drags and exposes Soludo, Nwifuru, Mbah & another SE Governors to perform better.
5. Focused multiple days on dilapidated schools in Lagos state till the state did a complete refurbishment of the schools. 6. Harry is also a registered APC member but calls them out whenever they FokUp.
7. Raise money for students & the sick.
8. Exposed the current INEC chairman’s handle for being Partisan as at 2023. Etc
Ronus ON THE OTHER HAND will do Bigotry 24/7 but can’t even Call out BAT when he Messes Up. Their Highest cruise is to Change the spelling of Owambe on Wikipedia and Argue about who created Egusi soup first. They dont call out Abiodun for Bad Roads. This Terrorism in the SW started out slowly from Illorin Ronus HAVE NEVER dragged AbdulRahman the Kwara state Governor to step up Security. Ekiti Has high Poverty, No Roads and Poor Mobile Network. Oyebanji is a monumental Failure, Many Ronus dont even know what he looks like. Evil Imams are preaching Intra ethnic Division daily. Zero word from the Ronu gang. Everyday You see a new video of Agberos & Thugs harassing innocent Lagosians, Youths on Hard Drugs, Lekki Flooding etc If you call Out Sanwo Olu RONUS will rush to insult you. Our Data is too expensive & clearly being Stolen RONUs have never asked Bosun Tijani how Far. Bayo Adelabu was a Disaster as minister of Power and Had the guts to run for Public office you fucking RONUS never called him out in his Bullshit. 45 SW children are in the Oyo bushes with BH till today Ronus cannot even Trend a Hashtag to Ginger Nuhu Ribadu. Your people are in Power and you can’t even push them to make your Lives better in the little things. Una Highest achievement is 24/7 Defending Bad Governance, Insulting Others and Engaging in Silly Arguments. Smh.
Sè wón Shepe fun yin ni?
My final advice remains; If you’re going to be a Bastard, at Least be a Bastard that is still useful to the entire Village. 😤