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War Is Never the Answer – A Call for Peace in Nigeria

Nigeria is bleeding. From the forests of the North to the creeks of the Niger Delta, from the central farmlands to the streets of our major cities, the signs are clear: tension is rising, trust is fading, and too many lives are being caught in the crossfire.

Whether it’s terrorism, banditry, ethnic clashes, secessionist agitations, or political violence, the story seems to be the same: anger, retaliation, and bloodshed. But let’s be honest with ourselves: how much more can we take before the fabric completely tears? How many more people must die before we admit the hard truth?

War is never the answer. It never has been.

We often hear people, especially on social media, casually throw around talk of war as if it’s some kind of shortcut to justice, freedom, or change. But ask those who lived through the Biafran War. Ask those still picking up the pieces in the North-East. War is not just headlines and hashtags. War is mothers burying children. War is families fleeing their homes with nothing. War is hunger, disease, trauma, and decades of regret.

And yet, here we are again circling the same dangerous road, fueled by frustration, fear, and failed leadership. Yes, Nigeria has problems, deep ones. Insecurity is real. Injustice is real. Corruption is real. But war will not fix these problems. It will only multiply them.

We cannot bomb our way into unity. We cannot shoot our way into fairness. And we definitely cannot kill our way into peace.

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What we need now, more than ever, is leadership with wisdom, not pride. Dialogue, not threats. Inclusion, not division. The government must do more than deploy troops; it must deploy truth, empathy, and real solutions. Security must be reformed. Youth must be empowered. Ethnic and religious grievances must be addressed with sincerity, not suppression.

But this isn’t just a government issue. It’s a people issue. All of us have a role to play. We must stop seeing each other as enemies. We must stop promoting hate in the name of tribe, religion, or politics. We must stop glorifying violence as the only way to be heard.

Peace does not mean silence. It means choosing a better way to speak. We are more powerful united than we are divided. Nigeria is not perfect, not even close, but tearing it down through war will not build the future we dream of. It will only set us back generations.

We cannot afford that. Let us be bold enough to say: We are angry, but we won’t be violent. We are hurting, but we won’t turn on each other. We want change, but not at the cost of our country.

War is never the answer. Let’s not learn that the hard way. Again.

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