Northern Govs Meet Saturday Over Terror Attacks
Barring any last-minute change of plan, the Northern Governors’ Forum will hold a crucial meeting today (Saturday) in Kaduna in response to the rising killings across the region.
The Director-General, Press Affairs, Gombe Government House, Ismaila Misilli, who confirmed the development, said the NGF Chairman and Governor of Gombe State, Muhammad Yahaya, convened the meeting.
“It will be held in Kaduna, and security will top the agenda. Barring any last-minute change, they have already decided to have the meeting. But I wouldn’t call it an emergency meeting,” Misilli stated.
Recall that a joint meeting of the NGF and the Northern Traditional Rulers Council was held in Kaduna in October 2023 to address the region’s pressing security and developmental challenges.
The meeting, which took place at the Sir Kashim Ibrahim Government House in Kaduna, was attended by Nigeria’s Chief of Defence Staff, General Christopher Musa.
On April 20, 2025, and despite sustained efforts by northern governors and the military, no fewer than 250 people were killed within two weeks in attacks that ravaged key northern states, including Plateau, Benue, Borno, and Katsina.
The attacks were attributed in part to the emergence of a new terror group, Mahmuda, also known as the Mallam Group.
Their rise has compounded existing security threats from Boko Haram, ISWAP, Lakurawa, and other militia groups.
However, our correspondents gathered that between April 24 and Wednesday, May 7, no fewer than 133 more people were reported killed.
The most recent incident occurred in the early hours of Wednesday, May 7, when Boko Haram terrorists killed an army captain and a soldier in Izge community, Gwoza Local Government Area, Borno State.
The Emir of Gwoza, HRH Alhaji Mohammed Shehu Timta, confirmed that the terrorists invaded the community around 1am, engaged the troops in a gun duel, as three military officers were killed during the encounter.
Just hours earlier, on Tuesday evening, May 6, gunmen suspected to be armed herders killed a chieftain of the All Progressives Congress, Akaabo Johnson, alongside three others, in coordinated attacks on Mbatsada communities in Mbalom and Mbasombo wards, Gwer East LGA, Benue State.
The Chairman of Gwer East LGA, Timothy Adi, confirmed the incident in a telephone interview, describing it as an unprovoked attack.
On Sunday, May 4, no fewer than 25 people were killed in a deadly confrontation between suspected bandits and local vigilantes in Alkaleri LGA, Bauchi State.
That same morning, 19 people were killed during a suspected bandit ambush and livestock rustling in Gwana district, also in Bauchi State, according to the state police command.
On Friday, May 2, fighters affiliated with the Islamic State group killed at least 11 soldiers during an attack on a military base in Yobe State, according to military sources.
On Thursday, May 1, suspected Lakurawa terrorists ambushed seasonal hunters in Hurumi Forest, Talewa ward, Tangaza LGA, Sokoto State, killing 13 hunters between 12 noon and 1pm.
Earlier on Monday, April 28, Boko Haram militants attacked Kwaple village, a predominantly Christian community in Chibok County, Borno State, killing seven Christians and razing homes and churches, according to a resident, James Musa.
That same day, a truck hit an improvised explosive device near the Cameroon border in Borno State, killing at least 26 men, women, and children, according to the military and eyewitnesses.
