In the villages of Nigeria's Middle Belt, where fertile plains once sustained generations of farmers, ghost towns now stand as silent witnesses to unrelenting violence. Families who once tilled the soil have been uprooted by armed jihadist invasions, bandit raids, and ISWAP/Boko Haram-led religious terrorism, their homes reduced to charred remnants in the chaos. As of 2025, over 3.5 million people in Northern Nigeria endure this forced exile; the Middle Belt alone accounting for a staggering share, their displaceme
In the villages of Nigeria's Middle Belt, where fertile plains once sustained generations of farmers, ghost towns now stand as silent witnesses to unrelenting violence. Families who once tilled the soil have been uprooted by armed jihadist invasions, bandit raids, and ISWAP/Boko Haram-led religious terrorism, their homes reduced to charred remnants in the chaos. As of 2025, over 3.5 million people in Northern Nigeria endure this forced exile; the Middle Belt alone accounting for a staggering share, their displaceme