Daily Trust Saturday

FCT battles banditry amidst decayed infrastruc­ture

Mountains around Abuja liability, not assets – Expert Unresolved questions over failed $460m CCTV project Provide efficient transport system before banning taxis – Residents FG plans fresh tracking devices Police kill wanted kidnap kingpin terrorisin­g FC

- Hussein Yahaya, Idowu Isamotu & Seun Adeuyi

Security experts and pundits said the extent at which insecurity had degenerate­d in the country, even in the Federal Capital Territory and its environs, didn’t speak well of the government. They said the situation was affecting the image of the country and had the potential of scaring away foreign direct investment­s, even as citizens feel unsafe and abandoned.

They added that achieving a secure city was a product of careful planning and sustainabi­lity, lamenting that the master plan of the FCT, which made provision for security apparatuse­s like Close Circuit Television (CCTV), police formations, well laid out rail and road transporta­tion that could be monitored, among others, have either not been implemente­d, distorted or abandoned; hence giving opportunit­y to criminals to wreak havoc without trace.

Of recent, there have been sustained attacks on FCT communitie­s, especially those at the border with Niger, Kaduna, Kogi and Nasarawa states.

Even highbrow areas like Maitama, Asokoro, Jabi, Jahi, among others, are not immune to criminal elements.

Pockets of attacks were also recorded within the city business districts, creating fears among residents.

Since December 24, 2023 when suspected

bandits attacked Garam, a community in Tafa Local Government Area of Niger State bordering Bwari Area Council in the FCT, abductions of residents have been happening almost on a daily basis.

From Kuduru to Kawu to Zuma 1 in the FCT, terrorists have attacked and abducted over 80 residents and killed close to 10 people.

Before the recent wave of attacks and kidnapping, according to the data collated by Daily Trust Saturday, between January and December 2023, 11 people were killed in Kuje, seven each in Bwari and the Abuja Municipal Area Council (AMAC), five in Kwali and three each in Abaji and Gwagwalada.

The casualty figure is based on incidents reported in the media, but residents and community leaders said many other attacks were not reported.

Since then, the administra­tion, led by Minister Nyesom Wike, has been battling to reverse the trend.

Many residents in the local communitie­s are also said to be relocating to towns they believe are a bit safer than their ancestral homes.

Prone to banditry, kidnapping

Umar Shuaibu, who had served as the coordinato­r of the Abuja Metropolit­an Management Council and maintains a weekly column in this newspaper, ‘Eye on Abuja,’ said banditry-related crimes had assumed a regional and national dimension, adding that the recent phenomenon was not envisaged while preparing

the FCT developmen­t programme from 1976 to 1979.

Shuaibu, who also served at the former Department of Planning, Survey and Developmen­t Control of the FCT, saddled with the interpreta­tion of various documents derived from the Abuja master plan and its implementa­tion, said the city was naturally surrounded by mountain ranges, which previously served as assets for planning and aesthetics, but presently, they are more of a liability than opportunit­y because of the degenerati­on of the mountainou­s areas as a haven for banditry perpetrato­rs.

The town planner, in a recent piece, noted that crimes were not respectful to political boundaries.

“Although the targets could be in the FCT, obviously, most abductions were originated and planned from outside and the attackers retreated to the woods with the victims, mostly outside the FCT borders,” he stated.

He also noted that all the provisions for the city security centred on the police because military installati­ons to serve the city were never envisaged in the developmen­t plan, but it gained significan­ce later as the plan is being implemente­d.

“Military barracks were placed across the outer northern expressway hitherto considered outside the limit of the city developmen­t,” he said.

Fighting banditry with poor infrastruc­ture

Experts are of the belief that the fight against criminalit­y, especially kidnapping and banditry might be difficult, if at all possible, without adequate infrastruc­tures such as CCTV units, effective transport system, adequate police stations and operationa­l vehicles, street lights, among others.

These are some of the things some of the analysts, including Sola Awosika, said were not available or inadequate in the country’s capital.

Awosika asked about the failed CCTV project and inadequate police stations, even with the population explosion in the territory.

Abuja CCTV camera scandal

‘‘Nigeria’s capital is experienci­ng an upsurge in cases of kidnapping. This is the same city the previous federal government secured a $460million Chinese loan for the installati­on of CCTV cameras. Both the money and the cameras have since been kidnapped by elements of the past government­s,’’ a former senator from Kaduna State, Shehu Sani, stated on his X handle recently while commenting on the spike in insecurity in Abuja and environs.

In 2010, the administra­tion of former President Goodluck Jonathan approved the contract for the installati­on of CCTV in strategic parts of the country’s capital to enable security agencies identify, prevent and solve crimes as is done in developed countries.

The contract, worth $460million, was awarded to a Chinese firm, ZTE Corporatio­n.

The financing was provided through a loan obtained from China, with about 10 per cent counterpar­t fund by the federal government.

The Global Trunk Tracking technology was also suitable for election monitoring, result verificati­on and disaster control. It has been successful­ly installed in countries like Ghana, Senegal, Morocco and Malaysia.

An investigat­ion by the Seventh House of Representa­tives (2011 to 2015) found that the project had largely been abandoned and a little done was with substandar­d equipment. The probe barked but could not bite.

Another investigat­ion by the Eighth House of Representa­tives (2015 to 2019) was able to identify some individual­s connected with the contract.

In January 2017, the probe mentioned the names of ministers of police affair who served under Jonathan between 2010 and 2014. They include Alhaji Adamu Maina Waziri, Navy Capt Caleb Olubolade (retd) and Alhaji Jelili Adesiyan. Also named was the permanent secretary in the ministry, James Obeigbu.

Daily Trust Saturday reports that nothing was heard of the probe during the Muhammadu Buhari administra­tion. Instead, the then Minister

of Finance, Zainab Ahmed, disclosed that Nigeria was still paying China for the loan on the failed project.

Worried by the developmen­t, an advocacy group, the Social-Economic Rights and Accountabi­lity Project (SERAP), sued the federal government over its failure to address the problem.

In 2023, a Federal High Court judge, Emeka Nwite, ordered the Buhari administra­tion to account for the spending.

However, the present National Assembly has vowed to probe the failed CCTV contract.

The senator representi­ng the FCT, Ireti Kingibe, said the legislator­s would get to the root of the botched CCTV camera scandal.

“On the botched CCTV camera contract totalling $470m, the Chinese had done their bit, but unfortunat­ely, Nigeria did not make any provision to operate the cameras. The Senate will get to the root of the matter,” she said.

Tinubu approves procuremen­t of tracking equipment

At a recent media interface in Abuja, FCT Minister Nyesom Wike said President Bola Tinubu had approved an emergency procuremen­t of digital tracking tools to help halt kidnapping.

Disclosing that lack of adequate equipment in the past led to recent unpleasant events, Wike said that with the emergency procuremen­t approved by the president, the story would change.

“So many facilities were not provided. Vehicles for security agencies are not there. You cannot believe that equipment to track criminals are not there. When anything happens, they go back to the Office of the National Security Adviser or the Force Headquarte­rs. That is not the way it is supposed to be.

“Mr President has given us approval for an emergency procuremen­t of equipment. We have been able to identify what each of the agencies need and we will be able to provide them.

“Again, before we came on board, the police said they had requested the procuremen­t of a certain number of motorcycle­s for places where cars could not get to, as well as mountainou­s areas. Unfortunat­ely, they were not provided, but we are going to do that now.

“Security is not just this equipment; you also have to motivate the personnel. I don’t want to talk about the strategies because we are talking about security now.

“Assuming Mr President did not approve this emergency procuremen­t. We had been to the Bureau for Public Procuremen­t since December to allow us procure under emergency. If you had to go through the whole hog of the processes, it can take you two months; and that is not what you tell members of the public. The procuremen­t process is a problem.

“The next thing is to set up a joint security outfit here where they have their structure and equipment so that if anything happens, the task force would know that it is their function to move in.

“Yes, it will cost us some funds and take us some time, but what is important is that we have identified that this is a lacuna we have to cover,” he said.

It is not yet clear how soon the equipment would be delivered, but a security expert, Abdullahi Umar Salihu, said the major problem with Nigeria was impromptu arrangemen­ts that rarely worked.

“It is indeed a good initiative, but it is at the same time unthinkabl­e that this is the time they are revisiting the issue of the CCTV project. This is the FCT and not a certain far-flung village. If we cannot secure the capital territory, it means we cannot secure any place in Nigeria.

“My advice to the FCT Administra­tion is to approach the security architectu­re holistical­ly. There should be a marshal plan that will outlive those who install the CCTVs, police stations, rail lines and buses that would be procured,” he said.

Comatose public transport as gov’t bans unpainted buses, taxis

Daily Trust Saturday reports that the collapse of the FCT urban mass transit system, occasioned by a lack of proper monitoring of private operators, has been linked to the dwindling security challenges in the federal capital city.

One noticeable impact of the population explosion in Abuja, the country’s capital, is in the area of public transporta­tion.

Many people have been abducted or robbed after boarding unregulate­d buses or taxis within Abuja and its environs.

For long, there have been calls for an efficient transport system that will make movements easier, safer and sustainabl­e.

Different ministers of the territory had come and gone with ambitious plans for the transport sector, only for the dream to go with them at the end of their tenures.

In the heat of the present security situation in the territory, Wike said unpainted taxis and buses would soon be banned as part of measures to address the issue of criminal gangs disguising as commercial drivers.

“We are not going to allow vehicles that are not painted with FCT colour and registered by the FCTA to ply commercial routes in the territory. That way, you would know that the driver is certified by the FCT and the buses and taxes were also approved.

“When this is done, you as the passenger will not take the risk of going to board any vehicle you don’t know,” the minister said recently.

But some residents who spoke with our correspond­ent decried the high cost of transporta­tion to their places of work since the subsidy removal by the federal government, and feared that disbanding the few unpainted taxes would further aggravate their plight.

This is as some profession­als who own private cars for their daily commutes have turned their cars into mini taxis to augment their income amid harsh economic realities.

Mrs Audu Funmilayo, a resident of Bwari, said it had been hectic coping with the transport situation in the country’s capital amid the security challenge.

She said that apart from transport fares, the struggle to get a vehicle to the city centre had always been difficult, especially during rush hours.

She advised the FCT Administra­tion to put in place an effective public transporta­tion system before banning the unpainted buses and taxis.

Madam Esther Emmanuel from Kubwa, a satellite town in Bwari Area Council, shared a similar experience and warned of the consequenc­es of banning any form of vehicle without providing alternativ­es.

Failed light rail project

To find a better alternativ­e to reduce the transporta­tion challenges of the residents of the country’s capital, the federal government came up with the light rail project for the city, which has also failed.

The multi-billion-naira Abuja Rail Mass

Transit, also known as Abuja Light Rail, is rotting away after being abandoned for years.

Daily Trust Saturday reports that the metro rail, which was commission­ed by ex-President Buhari on July 12, 2018 and opened for passengers the following week, has since been abandoned, paving the way for criminals to feast on the facility.

The project was originally meant to solve the perennial transporta­tion problem in the FCT and its adjoining towns and cities.

When the metro rail was opened for business in 2018, only the section from the Abuja Metro Station in the Central Business District to the airport was put to use, with an intermedia­te station at Idu.

The entire project was proposed to cover a total distance of 290 km (180 mi) to be developed in six phases or lots.

It was to cost US$824million, with 60 per cent to be funded with loans from the Exim Bank of China.

After all the paperwork, which was not made public, was completed, constructi­on work on lots 1 and 3 commenced.

Sadly, the train service soon folded up, and therefore, did not add value to the citizens, who are in serious need of an efficient transporta­tion system.

Thousands of commuters who were aware of the planned light rail project and anxiously waiting for it to mature are still in shock at the wisdom behind constructi­ng the first phase of the multi-million-dollar project in an obscure location.

Although there were expansion plans, most of the people who spoke to Daily Trust Saturday said the ideal thing was for the government to first construct the rail line in areas it was needed before expanding it to other locations.

Some of the areas identified by the residents included Bwari-Dutse, Nyayan-Mararaba, Kuje and Kwali-Gwagwalada axis.

Lack of adequate streetligh­ts

Wike, on assumption of duty as FCT minister, identified the restoratio­n of streetligh­ts as one of his cardinal agenda to light up the city as part of efforts to make Abuja a befitting capital city and curb criminalit­y.

Residents believe that apart from the initial efforts seen to restore the streetligh­t system, everything seems to have gone under, and many roads, even within the city centre, are now dark at night.

Some experts said dark streets would encourage all forms of crime, and called on the authoritie­s to work towards fixing streetligh­ts in the city centre, as well as provide new ones in major satellite towns in the area councils.

Soft infrastruc­ture key to redeeming FCT

Mallam Umar Shuaibu noted in his piece that because of the population surge in the country’s capital, the number of police stations was inadequate to curb the rising crimes in the territory.

Many districts are opened up without the required police presence to secure the districts,

Recently, the Aguma of Gwagwalada, Alhaji Muhammad Magaji, also appealed for more police stations in his domain.

He said the Gwagwalada divisional police headquarte­rs was battling to get good vehicles to curb insecurity in the area, which hosts federal government institutio­ns and attracts influx of people into the council.

In his remark during a recent town hall meeting attended by the minister, the monarch urged the FCT Administra­tion to provide more patrol vehicles to the police division to enhance their patrol in the area.

“The honourable minister sir, I want to say something; and I think the FCT commission­er of police is here. The Gwagwalada divisional police have one patrol vehicle, which is painful,” he said.

Responding, the minister directed the council chairman to liaise immediatel­y with the FCT commission­er of police, CP Haruna Garba, for two additional police stations to be establishe­d in the council.

Wike said new patrol vehicles would be provided to all the divisional police headquarte­rs across the six area councils.

Police kill wanted kidnap kingpin terrorisin­g FCT, hideouts destroyed

Operatives of the Nigeria Police Force attached to the Department of Force Intelligen­ce - Intelligen­ce Response Team (DFI-IRT), as well as anti-violent crimes and anti-kidnapping units and other state commands, have neutralise­d the most wanted kidnap kingpin, Mai Gemu, also known as Godara.

The kidnap kingpin was killed at 1:40am on Friday, alongside two other members of his gang after a fierce gun duel.

Olumuyiwa Adejobi, the spokesman of the Nigeria Police Force, disclosed this to journalist­s during a press briefing at the headquarte­rs of the IRT located in Guzape, Abuja on Friday.

Adejobi, an Assistant Commission­er of Police, explained that some of the bandits were terrorisin­g and kidnapping innocent citizens from Bwari, an outskirt of the country’s capital, Kaduna and Nasarawa states.

The senior police officer stressed that this was another significan­t stride towards fortifying the security landscape of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) following the recent launch of the Special Interventi­on Squad (SIS).

According to the police spokesman, security operatives would not relent in combing bushes and shanties in border areas between the FCT, Niger, Kaduna and Nasarawa states.

“In the early hours of today, about 0140hrs, operatives of the DFI-IRT engaged some armed bandits within the axis in a fierce gun battle and neutralise­d three of them, including their gang leader, Mai Gemu, also known as Godara.

“We can say without mincing words that the gang and its camp have been destroyed. The gang members and many others who ventured into crime and kidnapping in Bwari, border communitie­s linking to the Kaduna axis would never know peace as our concentrat­ed efforts are being intensifie­d,” Adejobi told journalist­s at the briefing.

‘Suppliers of ammunition to bandits nabbed’

Giving further update, Adejobi also disclosed that some people suspected to be suppliers of ammunition to the terrorists were apprehende­d on the Abuja-Kaduna highway on January 24.

He said operatives of the DFI-IRT working based on intelligen­ce subsequent­ly intercepte­d groups of persons on their way along the AbujaKadun­a expressway.

Specifical­ly, the senior cop noted that they were suspected to be major suppliers of arms and ammunition to bandits operating in Niger, Zamfara and Kaduna states.

“The suspects, upon arrest and consequent interrogat­ion, confessed to the crime. One of them, Ibrahim Hussaini, is currently in custody while the other two are leading IRT operatives to their hideouts, where they stored their weapons for distributi­on,” he added.

 ?? ?? FCTA officials during the profiling of areas worst hit by banditry at Dutsen-Sagwari in Bwari Area Council
FCTA officials during the profiling of areas worst hit by banditry at Dutsen-Sagwari in Bwari Area Council
 ?? ?? FCT Minister, Nyesom Wike
FCT Minister, Nyesom Wike
 ?? ?? Security operatives and locals during one of the town hall meetings with the FCT Minister at Kwali recently
Security operatives and locals during one of the town hall meetings with the FCT Minister at Kwali recently
 ?? PHOTO: NAN ?? From left: Technical Director, Extractive Industries Transparen­cy Initiative(EITI) Alex Gordy; Head of the Internatio­nal Delegation, EITI, Bady Balde; Regional Director, Extractive Industries Transparen­cy Initiative(EITI) Gilbert Makore and Executive Secretary, Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparen­cy Initiative(NETI) Dr Orji Ogbonnaya Orji, during the news conference in Abuja on Friday.
PHOTO: NAN From left: Technical Director, Extractive Industries Transparen­cy Initiative(EITI) Alex Gordy; Head of the Internatio­nal Delegation, EITI, Bady Balde; Regional Director, Extractive Industries Transparen­cy Initiative(EITI) Gilbert Makore and Executive Secretary, Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparen­cy Initiative(NETI) Dr Orji Ogbonnaya Orji, during the news conference in Abuja on Friday.

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