There’s nothing like collaboration between US military and the ZOO, what is there to collaborate on when they already know that ZOO military is compromised and complicit in the insecurity?
AN OPEN LETTER TO FELLOW NIGERIANS
Dear Fellow Nigerians,
Our nation is passing through one of the most difficult chapters in its history. From abductions to bombings, from rural communities under siege to cities gripped by fear, insecurity has become a shared burden. Yet in moments like this, the survival of a nation does not depend on government alone, it also depends on the choices, attitudes, and actions of its people.
The first duty of every Nigerian is to value human life above sentiment, tribe, religion, or politics. Terrorism and banditry are crimes, not cultural practices, not political tools, and not religious struggles. We must reject every attempt to justify violence with excuses or emotions. A criminal remains a criminal, no matter who commits the act or who the victim is.
Nigerians must also refuse to be silent supporters of terror. Silence in the face of evil is not neutrality; it is complicity. Harboring criminals, providing food, intelligence, shelter, money, or moral justification—whether out of fear, profit, or ethnic loyalty, only prolongs our collective suffering. Ask yourself: If these criminals were to strike your home, would excuses still make sense?
Equally important is the need to resist misinformation and dangerous narratives. Do not spread unverified reports, ethnic blame, or religious hatred. Such narratives divide communities and help terrorists achieve their aim: chaos. Before sharing any information, ask: Does this promote truth, peace, and justice, or does it inflame fear and hatred?
Citizens must cooperate with lawful authorities. Intelligence saves lives. Reporting suspicious movements, unfamiliar camps, strange transactions, or known collaborators can make the difference between safety and tragedy. Fear is understandable, but remember this: criminals thrive where communities are fragmented and distrustful. Unity is their greatest enemy.
At the same time, Nigerians must avoid taking the law into their own hands. Vigilance is not vigilantism. Mob justice, revenge attacks, and ethnic profiling only deepen insecurity and create new cycles of violence. Justice pursued outside the law ultimately weakens everyone and strengthens no one.
We must also demand accountability peacefully, lawfully, and persistently. Speak up through civil platforms, media, community leaders, and legitimate advocacy. Demand action, not empty promises. Democracy gives citizens a voice; abandoning that voice gives criminals more space to operate.
Above all, Nigerians must stand together. Terrorism feeds on division. When we allow tribe to fight tribe, religion to suspect religion, and region to blame region, we do the work of terrorists for them. Our pain may be experienced differently, but it is shared. No community is immune, and no group is permanently safe while others suffer.
History will ask what Nigerians did when terror threatened their future. Did we choose courage over fear? Truth over propaganda? Unity over division?
The answers begin with us today.
Signed,
A fellow Nigerian, calling for conscience, courage, and unity
It is a lie. There is no collaboration whatsoever. America of President Trump would not collaborate with a very compromised Nigeria government. Never!
There’s nothing like collaboration between US military and the ZOO, what is there to collaborate on when they already know that ZOO military is compromised and complicit in the insecurity?
God bless President Donald Trump, God bless America military and God save Nigerians from terrorists
AN OPEN LETTER TO FELLOW NIGERIANS
Dear Fellow Nigerians,
Our nation is passing through one of the most difficult chapters in its history. From abductions to bombings, from rural communities under siege to cities gripped by fear, insecurity has become a shared burden. Yet in moments like this, the survival of a nation does not depend on government alone, it also depends on the choices, attitudes, and actions of its people.
The first duty of every Nigerian is to value human life above sentiment, tribe, religion, or politics. Terrorism and banditry are crimes, not cultural practices, not political tools, and not religious struggles. We must reject every attempt to justify violence with excuses or emotions. A criminal remains a criminal, no matter who commits the act or who the victim is.
Nigerians must also refuse to be silent supporters of terror. Silence in the face of evil is not neutrality; it is complicity. Harboring criminals, providing food, intelligence, shelter, money, or moral justification—whether out of fear, profit, or ethnic loyalty, only prolongs our collective suffering. Ask yourself: If these criminals were to strike your home, would excuses still make sense?
Equally important is the need to resist misinformation and dangerous narratives. Do not spread unverified reports, ethnic blame, or religious hatred. Such narratives divide communities and help terrorists achieve their aim: chaos. Before sharing any information, ask: Does this promote truth, peace, and justice, or does it inflame fear and hatred?
Citizens must cooperate with lawful authorities. Intelligence saves lives. Reporting suspicious movements, unfamiliar camps, strange transactions, or known collaborators can make the difference between safety and tragedy. Fear is understandable, but remember this: criminals thrive where communities are fragmented and distrustful. Unity is their greatest enemy.
At the same time, Nigerians must avoid taking the law into their own hands. Vigilance is not vigilantism. Mob justice, revenge attacks, and ethnic profiling only deepen insecurity and create new cycles of violence. Justice pursued outside the law ultimately weakens everyone and strengthens no one.
We must also demand accountability peacefully, lawfully, and persistently. Speak up through civil platforms, media, community leaders, and legitimate advocacy. Demand action, not empty promises. Democracy gives citizens a voice; abandoning that voice gives criminals more space to operate.
Above all, Nigerians must stand together. Terrorism feeds on division. When we allow tribe to fight tribe, religion to suspect religion, and region to blame region, we do the work of terrorists for them. Our pain may be experienced differently, but it is shared. No community is immune, and no group is permanently safe while others suffer.
History will ask what Nigerians did when terror threatened their future. Did we choose courage over fear? Truth over propaganda? Unity over division?
The answers begin with us today.
Signed,
A fellow Nigerian, calling for conscience, courage, and unity