Nigeria, July 20 -- In 2015, when the Global Terrorism Index (GTI) ranked armed Fulani militants as the fourth deadliest terror group in the world, Nigeria was already grappling with the brutal reality of multiple security threats. Yet, nearly a decade later, as these same militants have grown exponentially more lethal, they have mysteriously vanished from international terrorism rankings - despite becoming what many security experts now consider Nigeria's most deadly non-state armed group.
This paradox raises troubling questions about how the global community measures and responds to terrorism, particularly when it involves complex ethnoreligious conflicts in Africa. While international attention remains focused on jihadist groups like ...
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