From Ndubuisi Orji, Abuja

Former vice president, Atiku Abubakar, said the killings have reached a “brutal and heart-wrenching reality that can no longer be ignored.’

In a statement he personally signed and titled “Enough is Enough: Benue Cannot Bleed in Silence’, Atiku said Nigerians are bleeding and begging to be heard and urged the people not to be silenced.

He called  on leaders at both the federal  and state levels to stop turning a blind eye to the killings in Benue State, while the state “drowns in blood”.

According to him, this time for leaders to stop offering condolences and start offering solutions, as well as work with security agencies, and put in place a security architecture that places a premium on human lives over politics.

The statement read:  “The bloodshed in Benue State has reached a devastating crescendo — a brutal and heart-wrenching reality that can no longer be ignored. For years, families have buried their loved ones in silence, villages have been ravaged, and communities shattered, while those in power watch from a distance, offering nothing but hollow assurances.

“How much more must the people of Benue endure before their humanity is acknowledged? Their demand is simple: to live in peace, to sleep without fear, to farm without being slaughtered, and to raise their children without the constant shadow of violence.

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“When citizens take to the streets to protest this injustice, they are not inciting rebellion, they are crying for help. They are demanding what every Nigerian is constitutionally entitled to: the right to life and the protection of that life by the state. But what do they receive in return? Tear gas. Brutality. Disdain. It is pouring hot oil on an open wound.

1999-2007

“To unleash force on grieving, defenseless citizens is not governance, it is cruelty. It is a betrayal of the sacred duty of leadership. What kind of government meets a cry for safety with the barrel of a gun and a canister of gas?”

The former vice president added that  “the silence, the indifference, the lack of urgency, it is all damning. It speaks to a deeper rot in the conscience of leadership, a frightening normalisation of violence against the very people they swore to protect.

“Benue is not alone. From Plateau to Zamfara, Kaduna to Taraba; the cries are the same. Nigerians are bleeding and begging to be heard.

“We urge the people not to be silenced. Raise your voices. Demand accountability. Demand justice. Demand a government that sees you, hears you, and protects you.

History will not be kind to those who chose power over people. The time to act is now.”