Yelewata Massacre: Benue Indigenes in Diaspora Write Tinubu, Makes 6 Key Demands
Benue - Leaders of Benue communities in the diaspora have strongly condemned a spate of deadly attacks in Nigeria’s central region, describing the violence as a "silent genocide" against indigenous populations and urging President Bola Tinubu to act swiftly.
The condemnation follows the June 14 massacre in Yelewata, Guma local government area of Benue state, where more than 200 people were reportedly killed by suspected armed herders. The diaspora leaders criticised what they described as a lack of federal response and mischaracterisation of the crisis.

Source: Twitter
In an open letter jointly signed by Professor Akaa D. Ayangeakaa, representing Tiv people abroad, and Chief Edwin Ochai, representing the Idoma diaspora, the leaders expressed anger over recent comments by presidential adviser Bayo Onanuga, who labelled the attacks as “reprisals” in a “farmer-herder conflict.”
“This is not a communal clash,” the letter stated. “To describe it as such is misleading and emboldens perpetrators of ethnic cleansing.”
They called Onanuga’s remarks “offensive and disheartening,” accusing him of trivialising a campaign of targeted killings, land dispossession, and mass displacement.
Citing recent attacks in Ukum, Apa, Otukpo, Agatu, Gwer West, Logo, Kwande, and Makurdi, the letter detailed what the diaspora groups say are planned and repeated assaults on farming communities. They said over 70 people were killed in Ukum in May, and entire villages have been razed in a wave of violence.
“These were not crossfire deaths. These were executions. Families wiped out. Homes burned. Survivors traumatised,” the leaders wrote.
They also said over two million people in Benue are now internally displaced, living in overcrowded camps without basic necessities.
The letter sharply rejected President Tinubu’s reported directive asking the Benue state governor to initiate reconciliation talks between “warring parties.”
“We are not at war,” the diaspora leaders said. “We are under attack. Dialogue cannot happen when one side is armed and the other is being buried.”
The groups emphasised that no arrests have been made, and no herder has been prosecuted, calling the lack of justice a “betrayal” and an “abdication of constitutional responsibility.”
The diaspora leaders issued six key demands, including:
They also questioned why the federal response has been tepid compared to similar incidents in other regions, warning that “continued neglect could further destabilise the region.”
The letter included emotional testimonies, citing children burned alive and families murdered in their homes. It insisted the government must stop equating victims and perpetrators under a false narrative of communal conflict.
“This is not about farmers and herders. This is terrorism. This is ethnic cleansing,” they wrote.

Source: Twitter
The letter acknowledged reports that President Tinubu plans to visit Benue on Wednesday, June 18, after cancelling a previously scheduled trip to Kaduna. However, the diaspora leaders urged the President not to allow the visit to be symbolic only.
“Let this be the moment when justice, compassion, and decisive leadership emerged,” the letter concluded. “The Nigerian people, and posterity, are watching.”
Meanwhile, the Benue state government has declared Wednesday, June 18, a work-free day. The declaration was announced in a statement by Mrs Deborah Aber, the secretary to the state government.
The work-free day in Benue is to honour President Bola Tinubu, who is visiting the crisis-hit state on Wednesday.
Tinubu is expected to hold a town hall meeting with all stakeholders during the visit.
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Source: Legit.ng