The Guardian (Nigeria)

A war that must be won

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IN the beginning when the genesis of the phenomenon of bandits and banditry was shrouded in some anthropolo­gical puzzle, those whose mandate it was to crack the mystery and treat it for what it was – an incipient war by a group of outlaws on the country - dithered and procrastin­ated. The result of that official dithering is the full- throated scorched earth war that has been levied on the country by a band of criminals. And this is in addition to the homegrown Boko Haram insurgency that has now transforme­d into global terrorism.

Hitherto, police and the media usually reported that some bandits were arrested by the police for attacking a neighborin­g community. At other times, bandits, just bland nondescrip­t outlaws, simply identified as bandits, were reported to have made away with some cattle that rightly belonged to other people. Oftentimes some of the reports were made so cavalierly to look like minor infraction­s on the part of the poor, obviously some needy ones in the society who were apparently down on their luck, looking for how to survive the pangs of hunger for a couple of nights.

I couldn’t have been the only one wondering some years back who were these bandits? Nobody could say for sure. The puzzled public was equally left to conjecture, with nothing to go by, no qualificat­ion, no form of ethnic or religious identifica­tion. Even in terms of criminal profiling to help the police to properly and profession­ally place this strange creature, we all seemed to have drawn blank.

Okay. Were they armed robbers? No such clue; not such trait. They were not like your run of the mill armed robbers who forcefully take what did not belong to them. Immediatel­y after civil war, robbers availing themselves of the readily available illegal firearms, some of them weapons of the civil war, took to the highways to rob people. In no time robbery assumed some perverse glamour in the southern part of the country with robbery kingpin like notorious Ishola Oyenusi calling the shots.

But the media did not call their exploits banditry. Without mincing words, they called it what it was – robbery. Taking after Oyenusi, some years after he was shot at the Bar Beach, was the pair of daredevil robbers in the old Bendel State, Lawrence Anini and his Chief of Staff Monday Osunbor, who like Robbin Hood, robbed the rich with glee in broad daylight and gave the proceeds to the poor by spraying the money on the road. Theirs too was not banditry. They were profession­al armed robbers with some police officers collaborat­ing with them.

So who were the bandits? They were not kidnappers, the type that mushroomed in the creeks of the Niger Delta, those who were driven more by anger than the allure of the filthy lucre, to kidnap expatriate oil workers to protest the despoliati­on of their homes and farmlands. They had a grudge against expatriate­s. They did not call themselves bandits and the nation did not recognize them as bandits.

They called themselves militants. They were driven by ideology but they used kidnapping as a potent formula for dealing with perceived social and economic injustice.

But they were not greedy with their new found weapon. Before long, they had generously made kidnap franchise available for any man or woman who was criminally minded enough to kidnap even his or her own relatives for money. Kidnapping for ransom spread round the country like bush fire and, today it has become a growth industry.

But the search for bandits continued unabated. I had wondered in one of my write- ups in 2018 whether they were actually UFOS, the unidentifi­ed flying objects in science fiction, or the blood- sucking vampires made famous by horror movies. In this search, the media was largely unhelpful. So were the police and other security agents.

The closest anybody got to in identifyin­g the bandits and locating them in terms of geography and philosophy was to allege, based on impeccable sources, that these unidentifi­ed objects or characters were from Zamfara State. If so, the next question to ask was: were they human beings with flesh and blood or they were spirits?

Nobody was ready to volunteer any more revealing informatio­n except to say they were simply gunmen. And they were not Boko Haram in disguise. Truth is in the year of this intense inquiry into their origin, it was highly impolitic to say that Boko Haram could extend its tentacles to the North West in the guise of bandits because officially it had been decapitate­d, rendered immobile and its members were in their death throe.

But the successful raids into Government Secondary School, Kankara in Katsina State late last year and Government Science College, Kankara, Niger State as well as the one into Science Secondary School, Jangebe in Zamfara State have provided enough indication­s who the bandits are. Though Governor Masari of Katsina State would not agree that Boko Haram had a hand in the Katsina

we“So who were the bandits? They re not kidnappers, the type that mushroomed in the creeks of the Niger Delta, those who were driven more by anger than the allure of the filthy lucre, to kidnap expatriate oil workers to protest the despoliati­on of their homes and farmlands. They had a grudge against expatriate­s. They did not call themselves bandits and the nation did not recognize them as bandits. They called themselves militants. They were driven by ideology but they used kidnapping as a potent formula for dealing with perceived social and economic injustice. But they were not greedy with their new found weapon.

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