A person stands in entrance of a broken and burnt home following a lethal gunmen assault in Yelwata, Benue State, Nigeria, on June 16, 2025.
Marvellous Durowaiye/Reuters
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Marvellous Durowaiye/Reuters
YELWATA, Nigeria — Villagers scrub streaks of blood from the partitions of brick huts and barns. Others nonetheless search by means of torched sacks of crops, garments and scattered belongings, to salvage what they’ll, weeks after a bloodbath.
Final month, dozens of attackers stormed the farming village of Yelwata in Benue state—Nigeria’s fertile “breadbasket”—killing a minimum of 160 folks. Armed with rifles, machetes and gasoline, they struck as households slept. The assault, one of many deadliest in latest reminiscence, sparked outrage from non secular leaders and lawmakers around the globe.
The bloodbath unfolded within the nation’s risky Center Belt, the place Christian farming communities like Yelwata sit on fertile land—and on the fault strains of Nigeria’s deepening farmer-herder disaster.
As soon as contained to native disputes resolved between communities, the violence has exploded into mass killings fueled by inhabitants development, the local weather disaster, and the collapse of conventional peacemaking.
‘They Have been Burnt Alive’
When NPR visited Yelwata within the aftermath of the killings Christian prayer books littered the ruins. Teams of younger males had been looking by means of the particles whereas flies swarmed round bones and human stays.
45-year-old farmer Terhemba Lormba farmed rice, maize, cashew nuts and citrus and sat on a stool outdoors what’s left of his house. Eight of his household had been killed. “Most of them were burnt alive,” together with three of his youngsters, he mentioned, wiping his eyes along with his shirt as he spoke. “They were hiding in the bedroom.” His brother, Lormba was shot useless as he tried to flee.

45-year-old farmer, Terhemba Iormba, who misplaced 8 members of his household together with three of his youngsters. They had been killed throughout an assault in Yelwata Village, central Nigeria in mid-June.
Terna Iwar for NPR
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Terna Iwar for NPR

Terhemba Iormba holds bullet casings coated in ash. His relations had been killed throughout an assault in Yelwata Village, central Nigeria in mid-June.
Terna Iwar for NPR
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Terna Iwar for NPR
35-year-old Mathias Dze had taken shelter in a close-by Catholic church in Yelwata through the assaults. When it was over, he went to seek for his brother, 30-year-old Elijah. He discovered him coated in machete wounds. “He was still breathing, so we rushed him to the hospital but before we reached there, he gave up,” he mentioned.
A Disaster A long time within the Making
Many of the suspects, in response to police, are bandits or armed herders — ethnically Fulani pastoralists who’re majority Muslim. Clashes between farmers and herders are rife in Nigeria and throughout the Sahel area, spanning West to Jap Africa.
However many years of escalating tensions have grown extra lethal in response to the Worldwide Disaster Group. In lots of disputes, farmers accuse herders of grazing on their land and destroying crops; herders in flip blame communities and criminals of stealing cattle. As soon as settled by means of native mediation, these disputes have escalated into a significant safety menace as conventional methods of accountability break down.
In Benue near 300 folks have been killed since April this yr in response to native media, whereas nearly half 1,000,000 folks have been displaced by the violence, in response to the UN – most from farming communities which have suffered massacres.

A burned Christian textual content is seen on the bottom in Yelwata Village, after the assaults in mid-June.
Terna Iwar for NPR
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Terna Iwar for NPR
Two weeks earlier than the assaults in Yelwata, two herders had been killed in response to the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Affiliation, an umbrella group for pastoralists. The group mentioned Fulani herders “seek peaceful co-existence” with farmers however are themselves typically profiled, robbed and killed and that greater than 500 herders have been killed throughout Nigeria previously yr.
“We are being driven from the land in droves.”
However farming communities in Benue deny the assaults are an escalation of tit-for-tat violence between herders and farmers, however a part of a marketing campaign to displace farming communities from their land fully.
Professor James Ayatse, a conventional monarch and chief of the Tiv folks, the dominant ethnic group in Benue State, visited Yelwata every week after the assaults. “We are still finding bodies,” he mentioned, strolling by means of the ruins within the village.

Left: Ash and particles is seen in a constructing within the village of Yelwata in Nigeria, left by the assault in mid-June. Proper: A survivor of the assault sits on a hospital mattress.
Terna Iwar for NPR
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Terna Iwar for NPR
“If you want to kill a people, then you must be interested in what they have and we believe that it’s the land,” he mentioned. “The land is rich, it’s fertile. But we are being driven from the land in droves.”
As assaults have mounted, so have claims of complicity by the federal government and safety forces, accused of not doing sufficient. Survivors say police stationed in Yelwata had been shortly overwhelmed—and that no reinforcements got here, even after hours of gunfire. “The attack lasted over three hours,” mentioned Mathias Dze. “People are asking: Why didn’t the security forces come?”
The assaults have additionally raised sophisticated questions across the security of Christians in northern and central Nigeria. Within the aftermath of the killings, Nigeria’s Muslim president, Bola Tinubu, was criticized for failing to adequately acknowledge the assaults. He then promised to go to the area however failed to go to the village itself, blaming the state of the roads.

Survivors and village residents in Yelwata Village, central Nigeria after the assaults in mid-June.
Terna Iwar for NPR
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Terna Iwar for NPR
Pope Francis provided prayers for “Christian communities in Benue who have been ceaseless victims of violence.” and U.S. lawmakers are pressuring the Trump administration to designate Nigeria a “country of particular concern” for non secular persecution.
However Nigeria’s overseas ministry has pushed again, saying the violence is not about faith. “Any narrative that seeks to give such incidents a coloration of religious persecution is erroneous and misleading,” it mentioned in an announcement. In northern Nigeria, the place the inhabitants is essentially Muslim, most farming communities focused in related assaults are additionally predominantly Muslim.
“He’s asking for his dad”
Whereas the injury from the violence is step by step repaired within the village, on the Benue College Instructing Hospital, most of the survivors have been left with life-altering accidents. A number of are youngsters as younger as 9 months outdated, with deep cuts from machetes or bullet wounds.

4-year-old Onyuso David, who was harm within the mid-June assaults, watches a comedy present on his grandmother’s telephone.
Terna Iwar
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Terna Iwar
Amongst them is four-year-old Onyuso David, who sits with bandages round his hand and ankle, watching a comedy present on his grandmother’s telephone. His dad and mom had been each killed within the assault, mentioned 62–year-old Felicia David, sitting by his aspect. “He was hiding with his mother when they killed her in front of him,” she mentioned, whereas his father was killed elsewhere within the village.
“He is been crying and crying, and asking for his dad to come back and see him. I do not know how one can inform him he has died.