
Behind the formal language of a press statement lies a message aimed squarely at ordinary Nigerians living in extraordinary fear.
Senator Abdul-Aziz Abubakar Yari of Zamfara West did not release budget figures or policy proposals this week. He released grief. In his recent statement responding to a recent surge in violent incidents across Nigeria, the lawmaker opened with an acknowledgment of pain that cut through the usual architecture of political communication.
“To every family that has lost a loved one, to every community living under fear, and to every Nigerian whose peace of mind has been disrupted by these unfortunate events, I extend my heartfelt sympathy and prayers,” Yari wrote.
The statement, measured and deliberately non-partisan, is directed at communities that have grown weary of government voices offering condolences without consequence. Yari’s call for Nigerians to “comfort those who mourn” and “stand shoulder to shoulder as brothers and sisters” borrows the register of pastoral care more than legislative authority.
For families in Zamfara, Benue, Plateau, and other flashpoint states who have buried relatives and returned to fields they no longer feel safe to farm, the question is not whether a senator mourns with them. It is whether that mourning changes anything.
Yari closes with a declaration of faith: “Nigeria will prevail. Peace will prevail. The spirit of our people will prevail.” Whether those words reach people who have already lost too much to believe them may define how history judges this moment of political expression.


