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Dynamics of Fulani And Muslim Linked Violence in Northern Nigeria: A Polycrisis of Governance, Resource Competition And Identity



The Oasis Reporters


December 3, 2025

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fulani militia often share their propaganda video on the internet, showing scores of them, all armed with boldly displayed AK47 rifles.



By Ahmed Magem




This article examines the complex dynamics of Fulani- and Muslim-linked violence in northern Nigeria, situating it within the broader context of state fragility, resource depletion, and political manipulation.




While the Boko Haram and Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) insurgencies have attracted global attention—responsible for over 35,000 deaths and displacing more than 2.2 million people—less understood are the interconnected herder–farmer conflicts and large-scale rural banditry. By analyzing these patterns through socio-political and historical lenses, this study demonstrates that religious and ethnic identities often serve as symbolic layers over deep-seated horizontal inequalities and the breakdown of the state’s social contract.





The violence, increasingly characterized as a “hybrid security threat” or “polycrisis,” transcends singular religious or ethnic motivations.





The paper argues that sustainable solutions require comprehensive judicial and land tenure reforms, promotion of inclusive governance, and a targeted focus on dismantling the political economy of violence rather than focusing solely on faith-based interpretations.



Introduction: The Framing Problem




Northern Nigeria has, for decades, been characterized by recurrent, devastating violence often framed simplistically in ethnic and religious terms. From the Boko Haram insurgency in the Northeast to the escalating herder–farmer clashes in the Middle Belt and the wave of rural banditry in the Northwest, narratives of ‘Muslim versus Christian’ or ‘Fulani versus others’ dominate public discourse. However, this popular framing obscures the deeper socio-economic and political conditions driving such conflicts, specifically the failure of the central and state governments to manage basic public goods: justice, security, and land (International Crisis Group, 2021; Aghedo & Osumah, 2012).



The analytical challenge lies in differentiating between proximate causes (ethnic rivalry, religious zealotry) and the structural drivers (climate change, population pressure, and state failure) that weaponize identity.




Historical and Structural Background




The Fulani are a transnational ethnic group spread across at least 15 West and Central African countries. In Nigeria, they constitute one of the most influential Muslim populations, historically tied to the 19th-century Sokoto Caliphate established by Usman dan Fodio. The Caliphate institutionalized Islamic law and governance across much of the north, laying the foundation for contemporary Muslim political and legal identity in the region (Last, 1967).

However, the current crisis is rooted in two key structural factors:



1. Colonial Legacy and Land Tenure: The imposition of the colonial system disrupted traditional grazing routes and land management customs. Post-independence policies often favored sedentary farming communities over nomadic pastoralists, contributing to the feeling of marginalization among many Fulani groups.





2. Climate Change and Demographic Pressure: The southward migration of herders, forced by the degradation of the Sahel and the shrinking of the Lake Chad Basin, has fundamentally increased competition over diminishing fertile land and water resources, transforming a historical relationship of coexistence into one of direct conflict.



Islamist Insurgency: Boko Haram and ISWAP



The Boko Haram insurgency, founded in Maiduguri (Borno State) in the early 2000s by Mohammed Yusuf, represents the most violent expression of religious extremism in West Africa. The group’s initial stated aim was ideological—to establish a puritanical Islamic state and reject Western education.





Following Yusuf’s extrajudicial death in 2009, the movement radicalized under Abubakar Shekau, unleashing terror across northeastern Nigeria and the wider Lake Chad region. The resulting conflict has been catastrophic, causing over 35,000 deaths and displacing more than 2.2 million people (UNDP, 2021).

The current threat is bifurcated:




Boko Haram (Shekau faction/JAS): More unpredictable, focused on soft targets and localized terror, increasingly weakened.




ISWAP (Islamic State West Africa Province): A splinter group that focuses on territorial control and sophisticated financial operations. ISWAP has adopted a strategic approach, providing quasi-governance and basic services in areas of the Northeast abandoned by the Nigerian state, thereby increasing its popular legitimacy and resource base. This strategy highlights that the insurgency is less about pure ideology and more about replacing a failing state apparatus.



Herder–Farmer Conflicts and Fulani Militias



Nigeria’s Middle Belt and parts of the Northwest have experienced chronic, brutal conflict between predominantly Fulani herders and agrarian communities (often Christian, but also non-Fulani Muslim groups). These confrontations are often inaccurately portrayed as purely religious wars but are fundamentally rooted in the political economy of resource scarcity.


The key drivers of escalation include:




1. Collapse of Traditional Mediation: State intervention and the availability of small arms have undermined local institutions traditionally responsible for resolving grazing disputes.



2. Militarization of Pastoralism : Herders, facing cattle rustling and violence, have increasingly armed themselves for defense, leading to a vicious cycle of tit-for-tat attacks.





3. Failure of Justice: Impunity is rampant. The state rarely prosecutes perpetrators on either side, which encourages aggrieved parties to seek vengeance outside the formal legal system. Between 2017 and 2020, herder–farmer conflicts resulted in approximately 7,000 fatalities—a death toll comparable to the Boko Haram crisis in certain years—and disrupted food systems across Nigeria (Amnesty International, ICG reporting).

Banditry and Hybrid Violence



Since 2018, northwestern Nigeria—especially Zamfara, Katsina, Kaduna, and Sokoto states—has descended into large-scale rural banditry. While distinct from the ideological insurgency, this crisis is deeply interconnected with the Fulani herder–farmer conflict.




Socio-economic Roots: Many perpetrators are marginalized Fulani youth who initially turned to cattle rustling after losing their own herds to raiding, environmental degradation, or debt. The violence is primarily economically motivated, driven by disenfranchisement and the availability of weapons filtering from the Sahel and the Northeast.




The Business Model: The primary driver is now kidnapping for ransom (KFR). Bandits have evolved from disorganized cattle thieves into a sophisticated, highly lucrative criminal enterprise. These groups operate across state lines, attack schools and villages for mass ransom payments, and effectively control vast swathes of rural territory.



Hybridization: These groups often engage in tactical alliances with ISWAP or other ideological groups, receiving training or weapons in exchange for a share of ransom revenue or territorial access, blurring the lines between criminal activity and ideological terrorism. This hybridization further challenges the Nigerian security establishment, which is designed to counter singular threats.




Conclusion: Moving Beyond Identity to Address Structural Crisis



Northern Nigeria’s violent landscape cannot be fully explained by simple narratives of religion or ethnicity. While Islamist groups invoke faith to justify atrocities, and herder-farmer clashes use ethnic banners, the underlying causes are structural, economic, and political. The crisis is fundamentally a demonstration of state fragility—a government unable to monopolize the use of force, manage resources, or dispense credible justice.





Sustainable peace requires the Nigerian government to move away from purely kinetic (military) responses toward a comprehensive human security approach that prioritizes:





1. Judicial and Security Sector Reform: Restoring faith in the state’s capacity to investigate, arrest, and prosecute perpetrators of violence from all groups, thus ending the cycle of impunity and reprisal.





2. Land Tenure Clarity: Developing and enforcing clear, equitable policies regarding grazing reserves and land use across the Middle Belt and Northwest, perhaps utilizing the framework of the National Grazing Reserves Act while prioritizing community engagement.




3. Dismantling the War Economy: Targeting the financial flows from kidnapping for ransom (KFR) and illicit mining that sustain the bandit groups and prevent their integration back into society.



4. Inclusive Governance: Addressing the deep-seated horizontal inequalities that leave millions of young people—both farmers and pastoralists—disenfranchised and vulnerable to recruitment by extremist and criminal elements.




Sustainable peace will depend not on suppressing identity, but on Nigeria’s ability to address injustice, promote inclusive governance, and restore the moral legitimacy of the state.

Greg Abolo

Blogger at The Oasis Reporters.

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