By Samuel Adeola
The Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), has condemned President Bola Tinubu’s plan to establish a cattle ranch in Abuja, calling it a hidden version of the rejected RUGA project.
In a statement on Wednesday, IPOB’s spokesperson, Emma Powerful, described the plan as a “land-grabbing strategy” aimed at rewarding killers and promoting “Fulani imperial expansionism.”
“IPOB strongly condemns the announcement by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu proposing the establishment of cattle ranches in Abuja, the ancestral homeland of the Gbagyi people,” the statement said.
Powerful claimed that the move mirrors how the Fulani allegedly took control of Hausa lands in the past, warning that the Gbagyi people could suffer the same fate if the plan isn’t stopped.
He said, “What began as the ‘need for grazing’ centuries ago led to the total subjugation of proud Hausa kingdoms… Abuja is about to witness the same fate if this madness is not stopped.”
IPOB criticised the government for allegedly focusing more on cows than on education, security, and innovation, questioning why cattle should be kept near Nigeria’s capital.
“Let him point to any major city, from Nairobi to New Delhi, São Paulo to Seoul, where cattle are granted permanent settlements around central governance zones,” he said.
Powerful also warned that the plan may encourage violence: “The message to Fulani herders is clear: kill enough indigenous people and the government will reward you with their land.”
He described it as “state-sanctioned terrorism” and an “act of aggression” against the Gbagyi people, who he said have no other homeland.
Powerful warned that if nothing is done, “there will be an Emir of Abuja,” and the Gbagyi could become “relics of their own heritage.”
He stressed that IPOB will resist any attempt to create cattle settlements in Biafraland, insisting that their forests, farmlands, and villages are not “bargaining chips in a federal contract of death.”
He suggested the government should move cattle far from human communities and use the railway system, saying, “Sambisa forest is reportedly vast enough to contain all the herds in West Africa.”
According to him, IPOB leader, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, had earlier advised that no modern country moves cattle on foot or builds ranches near schools and homes.
“IPOB stands with the Gbagyi people and every other indigenous nationality facing existential threats from Fulani neo-colonial conquest dressed up as national policy,” he added.
“Let the killings in the name of cows stop. Let the bloodletting cease. Let Nigeria choose reason over ruin.”