Take-It-Back Movement Condemns Tinubu-led Government For Summoning Amnesty International Over Report Detailing 10,000 Killings In Two Years | Sahara Reporters
Amnesty International had on 29 May 2025, released a report titled “Nigeria: Mounting death toll and looming humanitarian crisis amid unchecked attacks by armed groups”.
The Take-It-Back Movement has criticised the Bola Tinubu-led government over its invitation to Amnesty International Nigeria following the release of the human rights group’s report on insecurity in the country.
Amnesty International had on 29 May 2025, released a report titled “Nigeria: Mounting death toll and looming humanitarian crisis amid unchecked attacks by armed groups”.
The report claimed that 10,217 persons were killed in Nigeria from 29 May 2023 to date, adding that 2,630 deaths were recorded in Plateau State alone.
Responding to the resport, the Office of the National Security Adviser, led by Nuhu Ribadu, had questioned the AI methodology and sources of such a staggering statistics.
In a letter dated May 28, 2025, signed by the Coordinator of the National Counter Terrorism Centre under ONSA, Maj. Gen. Adamu Laka, the government subsequently invited Amnesty over the report.
Laka, in the letter described Amnesty’s report as “misleading,” stating that “several of the figures and assertions contained therein are inconsistent with verified data” available to the government.
In a statement signed by TIB Movement’s National Coordinator, Juwon Sanyaolu, the pro-democracy group claimed the Tinubu-led government had embarked “on the final stretch of its tenure with blatant intimidation and intimidation of civil society organizations exposing its failures.”
It described the government’s action as an attempt to intimidate civil society organisations.
The statement read, “The Mallam Ribadu-led National Security office has issued a letter condemning Amnesty International's report on insecurity while absurdly inviting the organization to a meeting to “review” its findings.
“The report, titled “Mounting Death Toll and Looming Humanitarian Crisis Amid Unchecked Attacks by Armed Groups,” lays bare the catastrophic insecurity crisis in our nation, particularly in the middle belt. Amnesty International reports that over 450,000 people in Benue and 65,000 in Plateau have been forcibly displaced, many now reduced to begging, stripped of their ability to farm or return to their homes.
“This alarming report details the relentless horrors in Plateau and Benue, where entire communities have been obliterated, and critical infrastructures including clinics, boreholes, schools, grain reserves, and places of worship has been destroyed. Furthermore, gunmen have attacked and sacked 672 villages across Benue, Borno, Katsina, Sokoto, Plateau, and Zamfara.
“In the two years since President Tinubu took office, we have witnessed the disturbing rise of new terrorist groups, such as Lakurawa in Sokoto and Kebbi state and Mamuda in Kwara state, as highlighted by Amnesty. The statistics are shocking, Benue state has recorded the highest number of deaths at 6,896, with Plateau following closely behind at 2,630.
“Recent reports by the Guardian indicate that local officials, including Victor Omnin, chairman of the Gwer West local government in Benue, reported that 10 people were killed in a Saturday attack on the villages of Tyolaha and Tse-Ubiam, and another 32 were killed the following day in nearby Ahume and Aondona villages. If Amnesty International had included these figures, the death toll would surpass even the already staggering numbers reported.
“In response to these escalating killings, a joint declaration from the Tor Tiv and the Chairman of the Benue State Traditional Council, His Royal Majesty Prof. James Iorzua Ayatse, and the Och’Idoma, His Royal Majesty Chief John Elaigwu Odogbo, issued a 14-day ultimatum for herders to vacate Benue State.
“With all these overwhelming facts before us, it is appalling that the NSA would dare to label such a critical report as “misleading.” This only underscores the administration's blatant disregard for ending the rampant insecurity plaguing our nation.
“The government of Tinubu should prioritise rescuing the terror-ravaged communities, rather than attacking critics, and civil society organizations like Amnesty International, calling for an end to the bloodletting in the country.”