The Guardian (Nigeria)

Now trouble is awake in the neigbourho­od

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TWO weeks ago, Thursday, March 14, 2024, soldiers of the 181 Amphibious Battalion of Nigerian Army went on patrol in Okuama community of Delta State, where the people had been pitched in a communal conflict with their Okoloba neighbours.

Okuama belongs to Ughelli South and Okoloba belongs to Bomadi Council. The struggle is not just over a piece of barren estate. It is a struggle over money for whoever controls the land will also have access to the largesse from oil companies, the state and Federal Government.

The soldiers were there to maintain peace between the two communitie­s so that they can find a less belligeren­t way to settle their dispute.

They did not know that death itself was laying in ambush, because it was a peace mission, the troops were not in an offensive mode. They were there to show the flag and reveal themselves fully so that anyone thinking of conflict may change his or her mind. It was a fatal error.

The soldiers and their commander were conspicuou­s in their movement and that was how they fell into an ambush laid by suspected hoodlums. Yesterday, Wednesday, March 27, the military authoritie­s buried the gallant soldiers at the National Cemetery in Abuja, with full honours. They were laid to rest to join the company of other heroes who had lost their lives in mostly internal operations in the last few years.

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, in a statement after the soldiers were killed, vowed that the perpetrato­rs would be caught to face the wrath of the law. Nigerians are waiting to see justice takes its course.

In recent years, Nigeria has become the Land of the Unsafe. No longer was travelling on Nigerian roads fun. Night travelling is now a journey into the unknown.

Robbers, kidnappers and ritualists have made movement across our country, a dangerous adventure. In the past, parents sent their children to far places to attend the various Federal Government colleges. The Airforce Secondary School in Jos was home to pupils from all over Nigeria. The Federal Government College, Sokoto, was attractive to parents from Lagos who willingly surrendere­d their children to travel to that edge of Nigeria.

During holiday period, the children will travel by road, train or by air to Lagos. Today, we are no longer at ease. Everywhere, danger lurks in the dark or even in broad daylight, ready to sprint on the unsuspecte­d.

It was a thing of joy for Governor Uba Sani of Kaduna State when he was able to score one significan­t victory against terrorist recently. Last week, he announced to his joyful compatriot­s that 187 children had been rescued from the den of terrorists. Few weeks ago, terrorists had invaded the LGEA Teachers Primary School, Kuriga, Chikun Council of the state and seized the children and their teachers. “While the school children were in captivity, I spoke with Mr President several times,” said Governor Sani. “He shared our pains, comforted us and worked round the clock with us to ensure the safe return of the children.”

What His Excellency did not reveal to us is whether any ransom money was paid to the kidnappers. He, however, declared, while commending the military: “The Nigerian Army also deserves special commendati­on for showing that with courage, determinat­ion and commitment, criminal elements can be degraded and security restored in our communitie­s.”

It is becoming increasing­ly obvious that the new warfare facing our military and the police may no longer be prosecuted on the familiar terrain of hardware and materiel. Perhaps, if the military had possessed the correct intelligen­ce assets in the Delta, the massacre of the soldiers in the creeks may have been avoided.

With the success rate of kidnapping, especially in the North, where scores or even hundreds of people are carted away at once, it is clear that intelligen­ce assets are not working well.

How can you transport 187 unwilling hostages across the community and yet manage to escape? Those in charge of Nigerian security need to spend more resources on intelligen­ce and modern method of policing and military warfare.

The business of kidnapping has become a multi- billion- naira empire across our land. The huge profit and minimal risk involved may also have attracted internatio­nal investors in the business working as supporters of Boko Haram, ISIS and other affiliates of internatio­nal terrorism.

They are putting in money to train terrorists, suicide bombers and others in their trade.

Working with them are bankers, runners, food vendors, drug dealers, gun- runners, agents of safe houses, power brokers, money bags and influence peddlers.

We cannot afford this war to continue on the society. When they say food is scarce, it is because the terrorists also concentrat­e on driving the farmers from their farms. In the end, we are all paying for this laxity in the security network.

Last week, a car was stolen from Ado- Ekiti. Within four days, a member of the gang who stole the car was arrested. The Ekiti State Police Command under Adeniran Akinwale, the commission­er, was able to pull in the suspect because he made a phone call.

In this modern era, a strong investment in science, phone tracking ( used by Akinwale and his men), drones, face- recognitio­n computer, face- reading gadget, voice- print, fingerprin­t, laser- weapons and others, would help to protect life and property.

How can we say we are living in the modern world and yet kidnappers would make phone calls many times and they would never be tracked?

The Central Bank of Nigeria ( CBN) has directed that no one would be allowed to withdraw more than N20,000.00 from the Automated Teller Machine ( ATM), per day, and yet millions are paid to kidnappers without trace! What are the uses of the BVN and the National Identity Number ( NIN) if these criminals operate openly in defiance of all these?

Some people think other methods may help national security more than science. One of these people is Sheik Ahmad Abubakar Gumi, a retired army captain and medical officer who is now a high- profile Islamic cleric.

He is advocating that the Federal Government should negotiate with suspected kidnappers and bandits to woo them over from their profitable trade.

Gumi too had taken personal risks in negotiatin­g with bandits to free hostages in the past.

“If the country could pardon coup plotters who committed treasonabl­e offences in the era of military administra­tion, the bandits can as well enjoy similar forgivenes­s even better under democratic rule,” he advocated.

Well, the Federal Government has invited Gumi to teach its officials some tricks on how to handle kidnappers and their kinsmen, the bandits. It may not have been an entirely pastoral visit as the Department of State Security is said to be seriously interested in Gumi’s bag of tricks.

Explaining the visit, Mohammed Idris Malagi, the Minister of Informatio­n, said Gumi was invited because “Nobody is above the law.” No one too should be hampered by the law.

The Constituti­on of Nigeria vests most of the power of coercion in the Federal Government and the President is the Commander- in- Chief. Every soldier bears arms on his behest. However, the reality is that every governor is actually also expected to maintain security within his state.

Every governor, as the chief security officer of the state, should be able to account for the residents of his state, including the loafers on the street. The governors need to empower the security agencies with necessary equipment, including voice recognitio­n computers. This is necessary because no neighbourh­ood or family is safe from the new epidemic of crimes and criminalit­y. Last week, Lagos State police command arrested two youngsters in their early 20s. They had planned their own kidnap and demanded $ 100,000 ransom from their parents. They then checked into a cosy hotel room, expecting their windfall.

Those who sow the wind will reap the whirlwind. Trouble is in the neighbourh­ood and it is wearing the seductive apparel of innocence.

The business of kidnapping has become a multi- billion- naira empire across our land. The huge profit and minimal risk involved may also have attracted internatio­nal investors in the “business working as supporters of Boko Haram, ISIS and other affiliates of internatio­nal terrorism.

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