Her Missing Son Returns In Her Dreams 

    Plateau Farmers Turn to Land Documents to Reclaim Their Fields Amid Violence

    In Adamawa, Swarms of Quelea Birds Ruin Rice Fields in Minutes 

    Once Landowners, Farmers in North West Nigeria Now Toil on Terrorists’ Farms

    One Family’s Devastating Struggle With a Mysterious Disease

    How Nigerians Are Adapting to Soaring Medical and Drug Costs

    What Arrests of Ansaru’s Top Leaders Mean for Nigeria’s Security

    Gang Violence Traps Minna in a Cycle of Bloodshed

    The Everyday Misogyny Faced by Women Healthcare Workers in Nigeria

    Broken, Shaped by War: The Scavenging Children of Borno

    Podcasts

      Danta Ya Taka Bom!

      Collage artwork for "Vestiges of Violence" by HumAngle, featuring desert scenes, vehicles, silhouettes, and a paper note on blue background.

      Freedom for Sale

      Collage with desert scene, people, camels, and vehicles. "Vestiges of Violence 126" text with HumAngle logo and podcast icons.

      The Last Day At Home

      Videos

      Quotes

        Mary John

        “They entered my son’s room, they were sleeping. They killed him, his two children, and cut off his wife’s hand. They also injured the other child. Then they entered the other room where my daughter was sleeping and they killed her too.”

        Fati Bukar

        “If I go back there, what I fear most is that I won’t have peace of mind. That I’ll be constantly thinking, ‘Will the terrorists come today? Will they come tomorrow?’ That alone is enough to make someone lose weight, to live in constant fear. That alone is enough.”

        Hadiza Yahaya

        “Not even Boko Haram is at this scale. Imagine thousands of people being killed within that short period, not with bombs or guns, but with arrows, swords and even sticks.”

        Murjanatu Musa

        “I have lost people. My brothers and their children were slaughtered; my in-laws were killed. I’ve lost over 70 close relatives and direct family members to terrorism. I sleep and wake up with a heavy heart.”

        Hassan Audu

        “It was an admiration. I admired the way boys my age wielded weapons, I gradually got used to their lifestyle. I adapted. It felt good, and I liked it.”

        Imam Abdulkarim

        “School is not our biggest problem. We have a small madrasa (school) where children recite the Qur’an. What we need, what we truly need, is clean water and a clinic. Just a place to take our sick ones without watching them die slowly.”

        Ade Obed Feru

        “This crisis has become a tradition, and I hate to admit that we’re getting used to it. Once planting season sets in, we don’t sleep, because people are going to start clashing over lands in the bushes out there, and then those at home will bear the brunt.”

        Kaka Adam

        “The toilets were impossible for someone like me. I had to crawl to access the latrine, and it was always filthy. My wives, who also have mobility challenges, suffer even more because they are always at home and doesn’t have access to open fields to relieve themselves during the day.”
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