Tuesday, December 2, 2025 - Suspected Boko Haram terrorists launched an attack on Kirchinga, Madagali Local Government Area of Adamawa State, k!lling a former councillor and abducting his two sons.
The victim, Hon. Thlama Sini Gadzama, a respected former
councillor representing Kirchinga Ward, was dragged from his home alongside his
children during the late-night raid on November 28, 2025.
Local sources say Sini was shot d3ad after pleading with the
attackers to spare him due to his diabetic and hypertensive condition.
“He told them he could not walk into the forest and asked
them to name their price. They refused. They dragged him to the outskirts of
the village and shot him before disappearing with his two boys," a family
member narrated.
Kirchinga, a community in the hometown of Governor Ahmadu
Umaru Fintiri, and the wider Madagali Local Government Area have endured some
of the most brutal episodes of Boko Haram violence since the insurgency spread
into Adamawa State over a decade ago.
Madagali bordering the Sambisa Forest and the Mandara
Mountains has repeatedly served as a corridor for terrorist movements between
Nigeria and Cameroon.
The area fell to Boko Haram in 2014, 2itnessing mass
killings, church burnings, abductions, and displacement of thousands before
government forces reclaimed it.
Despite the liberation of the territory, communities such as
Kirchinga, Gulak, Shuwa, Wagga, Hyambula, and Mildu have continued to face
intermittent attacks, ambushes, and kidnappings, especially in remote villages
close to the forest line.
Security analysts frequently describe Madagali as Adamawa’s
most vulnerable and exposed LGA, owing to its rugged terrain and proximity to
long-established insurgent hideouts.
The latest attack is especially unnerving because Kirchinga
is the home community of Governor Fintiri, who has often spoken about his
personal experience of the insurgency’s impact on families in the state’s
northern district.
For many residents, Monday’s attack represents a bold and
troubling escalation, striking at the symbolic heart of the state’s leadership
despite ongoing security interventions.
“This is a message from the terrorists,” a community elder
said. “They want to show that nowhere is out of their reach, not even the
governor’s village.”
Some residents have already begun fleeing to neighbouring
communities.
“We thought the worst was behind us,” said a woman who
lost relatives during the 2014 occupation. “Now it looks like the terrorists
are coming back in full force."
Community leaders are calling on the federal government
to reinforce military presence in the area, warning that failing to respond
decisively could embolden insurgents.
“Madagali needs more boots on the ground, more
surveillance, and more support,” a local security volunteer said. “We cannot
continue to live between hope and fear."

0 Comments