Given all the murder and destruction the hate-filled Nazis had purposefully inflicted, it’s safe to say they would have been deported back to their native nation if they weren’t Germans.
After the Nazis ceded in May 1945, the allies had to verify that their destructive racist supremacy notions were permanently suppressed by the Yalta Conference decisions, which included the split of Germany and Berlin into four occupational regions dominated by the United States, Britain, France, and the Soviet Union.
There are clear parallels between the Nazi programme for Germany and Europe and the Caliphate Agenda’s plans for Nigeria. There is, however, a significant distinction. The Nazis were indigenous people, but the Fulani, who are the targets of the Caliphate Agenda, are Nigerian immigrants and settlers. Ahmadu Bello, a Fulani and the Premier of the Northern Region, firmly proclaimed the Caliphate Agenda in 1960, barely twelve days after Nigeria gained independence from British colonisation. Like the Nazi Agenda, Bello’s hate-filled Caliphate Agenda was a plot for social breakdown and an ethno-racist new order. According to Bello, the Caliphate Agenda’s goals are:
1) That Nigeria will become a Fulani “estate” – this indicates that indigenous peoples’ lands will be seized and handed to the Fulani through policies.
2) The Fulani must RUTHLESSLY prevent a power shift.
3) The indigenous peoples of the vast Middle Belt (which the North claims) would be “willing tools” – that is, they would be used to further the Caliphate Agenda.
4) The South would be a “conquered territory” where indigenous peoples would “never” be allowed “to have control over their future,” implying that their right to self-determination would be taken away, their resources seized, and they would be denied access to long-term infrastructure and development.
In other words, Bello’s Caliphate Agenda would put an end to the society that indigenous peoples knew before the Fulani arrived, and replace it with a new one based on Fulani ethnic and religious superiority, with ancestral lands of indigenous peoples now belonging to Fulani immigrants.
Bello’s Caliphate Agenda has accelerated since Buhari’s Fulani-majority dictatorship took power. A Google search will turn up warnings from foreign and Nigerian individuals and organisations about Fulani militias working with Islamic terrorists (“bandits”) to commit genocide against indigenous peoples in the Middle Belt, which is expanding southwards. Here are a few thoughts:
“You must rise to defend yourselves from these individuals; if you rely on the Armed Forces to protect you, you will all perish… This ethnic cleansing in Taraba, and throughout Nigeria, must come to an end. The military has sheltered and covered these criminals, and you must be vigilant to guide and protect yourself since you have nowhere else to go… Ethnic cleansing must halt immediately, or Somalia will devolve into a children’s game” – T Y Danjuma, Lt-Gen (rtd), Taraba State University, 24 March 2018
“I accuse Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari’s regime of participation in the crimes of Islamist Fulanis.” — Bernard-Henri Lévy, IRF Special Roundtable Discussion, October 27, 2021
“The world would be furious and involved if what is occurring in Nigeria happened in practically any country in Europe.” — Former U.S. Congressman Frank Wolf, Christian Post
“Help, Secretary #Blinken!” Every day, I get news from my #Nigerian friends. More and more #Christians are being slaughtered. More and more #Fulani are serving as proxies for #BokoHaram and thus #AlQada. I had fallen to the ground. Documentaries are featured in my film, which will be released in the United States soon. #BuhariMustGo” — Bernard-Henri Lévy, August 3, 2021, Tweet (@BHL)
“For years, Boko Haram and Muslim Fulani terrorists have killed, raped, kidnapped, and attempted to expel Christians from portions of northern Nigeria. Meanwhile, the Nigerian government has adopted a policy of apathy, if not outright involvement, in what is appropriately referred to as “genocide” by observers both inside and outside the nation.” — Christian Post, August 29, 2020, John Stonestreet and Roberto Rivera
Nigerians may have been perplexed when Buhari, a Fulani, appointed members of his clan to critical ministries and agencies like security, finance, and intelligence, but that is no longer the case. They now know that Nigeria is being RESTRUCTURED into a Fulani “estate” through genocide, land grabs, and state terror in order to create a homeland for the Fulani at the expense of the indigenous landowners.
In February 2021, Bala Mohammed, the governor of Bauchi State and a Fulani, declared that Fulani (from anywhere in Africa) have a right to any part of Nigeria, expressing “a sense of Fulani conquest and superintendence over the rest of Nigeria, a belief that other tribes are captives of his ethnic group…”
Farouk Adamu, a Fulani politician from Jigawa State, sneered on camera in 2013 that the crude oil resources in the southern states of Bayelsa and Delta belonged to Jigawa State, which is part of the northern Arewa-Sharia bloc. “We shall do everything in our power, even our blood,” he had vowed, “to ensure that we obtain an uninterrupted supply of oil in Bayelsa and Delta.”
Numerous evidences of the Caliphate Agenda abound, such as the imposition of Fulani settlements on lands taken from indigenous peoples under the guise of “cattle ranches” (RUGA/Livestock Transformation Plan), the highly unpopular National Waterways Bill, which would place central government control over all waterways, surface and ground waters, as well as the lands on their banks;
Because they believe they have the sanction of a Fulani-majority regime, armed Fulani have the audacity to kill, loot, and destroy. The Fulani governing elite’s boldness stems from the bogus 1999 Constitution, a counterfeit that falsely claims indigenous peoples wrote it. It is naive for those pursuing Bello’s Caliphate Agenda to believe that indigenous landowners, who are now being massacred and dispossessed, with any survivors being transported to IDP camps, will not mount a fierce and successful resistance at some point in the future. As a result, Bello’s Caliphate Agenda has signalled the end of (unitary) Nigeria. Those responsible for this unnecessary disaster will face consequences. The Fulani have allowed their name to be pulled down and to evoke the same sentiments as the word “Nazi” due to ethnic and religious supremacy notions.
Since Bello’s Caliphate Agenda is represented by that unlawful 1999 Constitution, indigenous ethnic nationalities, who are its intended victims, will see it decommissioned. That process has begun with the NINAS Movement. It entails postponing general elections in 2023 (which would extend the life of the phoney 1999 Constitution) in order to establish a time-bound Transitional Government in which elected officials would remain in office and Bello’s Caliphate Agenda’s terrible consequences would be avoided.
Ndidi Uwechue is a British citizen having Lower Niger Bloc Igbo ancestry. She is a signatory to the Constitutional Force Majeure and writes from Abuja. She is a retired Metropolitan (London) Police Officer.