Nigeria is rapidly being transformed into a biotech experiment ground, exploited and destroyed under the guise of various forms of terrorism. The most insidious of these is biotechnology terrorism, a calculated agenda designed to subjugate Nigerian farmers and destroy the nation’s agricultural heritage.
The Alarming Agenda
According to the U.S. Council on Foreign Relations, between 2015 and 2018, Boko Haram claimed approximately 37,500 lives, with Muslims constituting 85 per cent (32,000) and Christians 15 per cent (5,500). If most victims were Muslims, how can this violence be classified as Islamic terrorism?
The reality is that these individuals, both Christians and Muslims, were natural seed growers in their communities—farmers who preserved and propagated indigenous, self-replicating seeds.
Such farmers were targeted because they threatened the profits of multinational biotech companies like Monsanto-Bayer, which produce genetically modified organisms (GMOs). In Zamfara State alone, where 60 per cent of victims were Hausa and 40 per cent Fulani, the narrative of Fulani herdsmen terrorism unravels. Fulani would not target their own people. Instead, these killings appear to have been strategic, with perpetrators using advanced technology to identify and target natural seed growers.
Tracking and Exploitation Through Technology:
Between 2009 and 2013, Nigerian farmers received ₦2bn in grants from Bill Gates for purchasing seeds via an electronic wallet system integrated with GPS and NFC technology. Alongside this, 14 million cell phones were distributed under the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (FMARD), led by Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, a former director of the Gates-funded Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA).
This system precisely tracked farmers’ locations. Such data was reportedly passed to mercenaries disguised as Boko Haram insurgents, bandits, or Fulani herdsmen. These mercenaries systematically attacked farmers, particularly those cultivating natural seeds. Displaced survivors were forced into Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camps, where GMO seeds were introduced as a “solution.”
The Trap of GMO Seeds
Unlike natural seeds, GMO seeds are non-replicating, forcing farmers to buy new seeds each planting season. Initially provided for free, these seeds create dependency. Once natural seeds vanish, farmers unable to afford GMO seeds may be coerced into participating in sinister programs like “Egg for Food.”
Egg Harvesting: The Darker Motive
This program exploits female farmers by demanding ovarian eggs in exchange for GMO seeds. Ovarian eggs are essential for Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer (SCNT), a cloning technology pivotal to the $30tn global cloning industry. The G7 nations’ cloning agenda, initiated in 2005, requires over 100 million eggs from 10 million women.
Repeated egg donation leads to Ovarian Hyperstimulation Syndrome (OHSS), a deadly condition causing organ failure, cancer, and infertility, with a fatal prognosis of 3–5 years. Nigeria’s large population of female farmers, particularly in the Northeast and Northcentral regions, has made them prime targets for this exploitation.
Legislation That Enables Genocide
Key laws have facilitated this agenda:
National Health Act (2014): Allows organ and egg harvesting without explicit consent.
National Biosafety Management Agency Act (2015): Permits unrestricted GMO seed distribution.
These laws have left Nigerian farmers defenseless, while biotech companies continue to exploit the country under the guise of humanitarian assistance. The introduction of infertility-causing Epicyte genes in GMO seeds further enslaves farmers, forcing reliance on IVF clinics, which covertly harvest eggs under the pretense of fertility treatments.
The Silent Genocide
The genocide in Nigeria is a coordinated attack disguised as terrorism. With 85 per cent of victims being Muslims, accusations of Islamic terrorism crumble under scrutiny. The real perpetrators—biotechnology corporations—are welcomed as saviors while orchestrating a silent genocide. British mercenaries, equipped with advanced technologies, have added to this exploitation.
A Call to Action
Nigerians must awaken to this reality. This is not about religion or tribalism but a systematic agenda to destroy the country’s sovereignty and exploit its citizens. As biotechnology terrorism unfolds, Nigerians must resist becoming pawns in this global experiment.
The truth is clear: not everything that glitters is gold.
BUKAR Mohammed is a public analyst from Kano
Nigeria: A Biotech Experiment Lab Under Siege is first published on The Whistler Newspaper