The Guardian (Nigeria)

The rise of militias in Nigeria

- Ike Willie- Nwobu, Ikewilly9@ gmail. com

SIR: Militias are rising in Nigeria, thanks to insecurity. An explosion of militias, some government­backed, and others backing themselves, is currently rocking the country. Armed, aggressive and unaccounta­ble, these militias are symptoms of Nigeria’s insecurity and militate against its security. Government has failed to provide security. States, groups and individual­s are compelled to fend for themselves, and compete for the increasing­ly scant scraps of security in Nigeria.

Nigeria’s boundless landscape has many insecure spots. And militias go with them. In the Southwest, there is Amotekun. Ebubeagu in the Southeast. Nigeria’s Southsouth has many militias competing for the country’s black gold. In the North, vigilante militias have evolved to fight or contribute to insecurity. Some of them are partners with Nigeria’s security forces in the combat against insecurity.

In Nasarawa State, Miyetti Allah’s decision to front a vigilante group has worked up a cyclone. The group says it is a response to banditry which disproport­ionately affects its members who are cattle rearers. The move is causing apprehensi­on. Because the group has been fingered as a key provocateu­r in deadly farmerherd­er conflicts in North central, many feel there is more to it.

But one more militia may not be too much in Nigeria now. What is too much is the seeming incompeten­ce of a government that can neither protect men nor cattle. So far, Nigeria has refused to entertain the idea of state police. Security personnel are stretched across the country. Poorly equipped, poorly motivated and facing superior weapons, Nigeria has been mostly second best in the war for its survival.

But beyond being regional shows of force, the militias ward off rival groups which come to inflict maximum damage. Thus, where government failure leaves a vacuum, others step in. Like other Nigerians, Miyetti Allah fear for their lives and cattle. They have contribute­d a significan­t number of casualties to Nigeria’s cauldron of insecurity. They have also been accused of formenting insecurity. It is why this move fiercely raises eyebrows. Which Miyetti Allah is showing up in the vigilante group? Is it the one conscious of Nigeria’s security, or the one accused of compromisi­ng it? Already, the Nasarawa State government has denied having a hand in the formation of the group. It should alarm government at all levels that individual­s and groups are taking their security into their hands. Non- state actors arming themselves under different guises should alarm the government. In many ways, it is an admission of failure that individual­s and groups are now resorting to protecting themselves. It is an indictment of the government.

Nigeria’s bloated budget provides billions for security every year. Yet, it is Nigerians armed with sticks and knives who must defend themselves from the daily assaults of ruthless terrorists. Unfortunat­ely, Nigeria has become a clear example of what can happen when a promising country lacks the right people in power. Africa’s most populous country is a study in what happens when potentials do not meet the right people.

These militias are only symptoms of the disease that insecurity has become on the body of Nigeria. It is like a cancer which is metastasiz­ing gradually.

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