HomeOpinionNigeria’s Demography: Sleepwalking Into Dispossession

Nigeria’s Demography: Sleepwalking Into Dispossession

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By Okechukwu Nwanguma
Nigeria’s demographics are being transformed right before our eyes. Entire communities in Plateau, Benue, and Southern Kaduna are being wiped out. Villages in Niger, Zamfara, and Sokoto are reduced to ashes.
Survivors are chased into IDP camps while strange occupants quietly take over the lands, homes, and ancestral heritage of the dead.
Tomorrow, those same occupants will speak with confidence:
“Resources must be shared according to population.”
“Political positions must be shared according to the number of citizens who voted.”
This is how conquest is laundered into legitimacy – not just with guns, but with census figures, INEC registers, and official statistics. What begins as slaughter ends as a matter of political arithmetic in Abuja.
The danger is grave: once injustice hardens into demography, it becomes irreversible. Numbers will be weaponised to silence history. Victims will be told to keep quiet because “equity” demands it. The dead will be erased twice – first by violence, then by statistics.
Diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) sound noble. But stripped of historical truth, they become a double-edged sword. For aggressors, DEI becomes a shield: reward us because we are now the majority. For victims, it becomes chain: accept your dispossession in the name of fairness.
This is already happening. In Plateau, mass killings are followed by occupations. In Benue, farmers cannot return, but attackers graze freely. In Southern Kaduna, massacres continue while officials look away. Slowly, these crimes are calcifying into new demographic “realities.”
And make no mistake: what happens in the Middle Belt will not stop there. The South must learn the lesson. If leaders in the Southeast, Southwest, and South-South continue to treat these tragedies as “other people’s problems,” they will wake up to the same fate. Already, unchecked migration, occupation of forests, and violent clashes in Ondo, Oyo, Enugu, and Delta are early warning signs.
Southern leaders must act now. They must demand an honest national conversation about displacement and demographic manipulation. They must insist on accountability for the killings in the Middle Belt, and prevent their own regions from being overrun under the same silence. Protecting ancestral land and identity is not tribalism – it is survival.
The warning is clear: Nigeria cannot survive if justice is replaced with statistics. Equity without history is fraud. Inclusion without accountability is surrender. If we remain silent while communities are erased, tomorrow’s “majorities” will stand on the graves of today’s victims – and call it democracy.

 

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