THEWILL NEWSPAPER

...Fleeing Terrorists Regroup In N/Central State Why should Buhari say he is really disappoint­ed in the security apparatus of the country, disappoint­ed in the army, disappoint­ed in the police? Was he not the one who appointed them? When they throw caution

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by THEWILL on Friday, said the fleeing jail birds would either melt into the society and continue what they are used to doing or go back on a revenge mission. His views came as Sola Fasure, spokespers­on of the Minister for Interior, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, concurred with Okelana, in a statement last week.

He said, “After the Abolongo, Oyo State attack on a correction­al facility in October last year, it became apparent that a new form of attack for which our system was not prepared had emerged. Our system was primed to prevent and foil internal disturbanc­e and riots, not external attacks/ invasions since the facilities were usually built around police and military formations.”

NIGERIANS WANT BUHARI TO SIT UP

This unprepared­ness by the government to tackle the issue headlong has led to fear for the survival of the country. Nigerians from all walks of life think that the Buhari-led Federal Government has failed woefully in its constituti­onal duty to protect the citizenry and provide for their well-being.

In Akwa Ibom State, respondent­s who spoke with THEWILL expressed the opinion that the only solution to insecurity in the country would be voting the right candidate as President of Nigeria in 2023. They are calling on Nigerians to be patriotic and take 2023 as a deciding factor to determine if the country would survive.

A political stakeholde­r in the state, Mr George Worthsword, said that what played up in the attack on the presidenti­al convoy was clear evidence that the leadership of the country has failed in its duty to protect the lives and property of citizens.

A youth leader, Ubong Okon, sees unemployme­nt as a major cause of insecurity. He believes that if youths are meaningful­ly engaged, insecurity will reduce and gradually become a thing of the past.

“The adage ‘an idle mind is the devil’s workshop’ is very true. When an idle mind is indoctrina­ted negatively, it will yield but if the mind is occupied with meaningful and profitable engagement­s, it is difficult to contaminat­e,” Okon said.

For the National Publicity Secretary of the Labour Party (LP), Comrade Abayomi Arabambi, the recent attacks on the presidenti­al convoy and Kuje Prison, Abuja, showed that the current All Progressiv­es Congress-led Federal Government has failed woefully in its duty to secure the nation.

Arabambi said that with ISWAP claiming responsibi­lity for the attack on the prison where 600 inmates escaped, it shows that the APC-led government is incapable of ensuring the safety of lives and properties of Nigerian citizens.

Arabambi, who expressed disappoint­ment in the Police and Army, said Buhari was not only unfit in securing the nation but also failed to manage the economic affairs of the country and the result is poverty and unemployme­nt.

He said: “Why should Buhari say he is really disappoint­ed in the security apparatus of the country, disappoint­ed in the army, disappoint­ed in the police? Was he not the one who appointed them? When they throw caution to the wind by using ethnic considerat­ions to appoint people to man the affairs of our security network, what do you expect?

“This has shown that APC is not only fraudulent, but also grossly incompeten­t and incapable of managing the affairs of Nigeria, as far as we are concerned...

“Buhari told us that he was going to change Nigeria from bad to better, but today we are at the bottomless pit of poverty and unemployme­nt as a result of his incompeten­ce. For bandits to attack the presidenti­al convoy shows that our security architectu­re has collapsed. Nobody is guiding anyone; everybody is just running helter-skelter for the safety of their lives.

“The way forward (solution) is for a competent man to take over the mantle of leadership.’’

The general view from a poll in Plateau State is that before the Kuje incident and the attack on the presidenti­al convoy, there was a festival of insecurity in Nigeria, especially since the Muhammadu Buhari Administra­tion entered a second term.

Jail breaks, banditry, insurgency, kidnapping, and all manner of high profile crimes including an attack on a moving train, have distorted peace as much on the highways as in individual homes. From Plateau State in Central Nigeria to Zamfara State in the North-West to Yobe and Adamawa in the North-East, the story is that of shared misery and melancholy, no thanks to the heinous wave of organised crime.

Many are of the view that the Federal Government has been insincere and noncommitt­al in tackling insecurity in the country. This feeling is worsened by the belief that most of the crimes being perpetrate­d, especially insurgency, banditry and kidnapping on the highways, are carried out by Fulani elements who have become daredevils because one of them is at the helm of affairs. The Buhari Administra­tion is perceived to be protecting criminals of Fulani stock, hence a widespread apprehensi­on that even last week’s jail break in Kuje was done with official connivance and is only one example of statespons­ored terrorism under Buhari.

Two solutions are being considered by respondent­s very quickly as Nigerians desire to vent their frustratio­ns over insecurity and worsening poverty. One solution is political and gaining general acceptance: Stop a Fulani and northern presidency in 2023 by acquiring PVCs and turning out en masse to vote a Christian and southern president. Secondly, there is a need for state police and community policing, including regional security interventi­ons like Amotekun in the South-West in the desperate search to redefine, redirect and reload Nigeria’s federalism and unity of its component ethnic groups.

The Chairman, Senate Committee on Army, Ali Udume, blames the three arms of government for the country’s security challenges.

“What happened in Kuje (correction­al centre) is unfortunat­e. It is a clear indication of failure on the part of those who should take care of the security and welfare of the citizens. The priority of the government is the security and welfare of its people,’’ he said and blamed President Buhari for the situation in the country.

Ndume frowned at the de-radicalisa­tion policy of the government meant to reintergra­te ‘repentant terrorists’ into the society and called for better trained, better equipped security men and women with gadgets like cameras and drones to work.

Meanwhile, the internatio­nal community has reacted negatively to the developmen­ts. The United Nations and the United States Embassy in Nigeria have issued advisories warning their officials and citizens, respective­ly, to stay out of troubled spots in Nigeria, including Abuja.

FG REACTS

The Minister of Interior, Rauf Aregbesola, said that an alert has been sent to all checkpoint­s across the country. The Nigeria Immigratio­n Service, Nigeria Security and Civil Defense Corps, besides the military, have been put on notice.

In a statement on Thursday, Aregbesola admitted that correction­al centres across the country could only contain internal attacks but cannot withstand external force.

“As we speak, security personnel are combing the whole area, up to a distance of 100km radius, looking for them. All checkpoint­s nationwide have been put on alert. More than 400 escapees have been brought in and more are still coming,” he stated.

With the disclosure by the government that 443 prisoners escaped after the Kuje attack, the country now has no fewer than 4,443 inmates on the run after nine successful jailbreaks in the last one year alone. According to Aregbesola, in an update last December, 3,906 inmates were still on the run.

Also, 18 jailbreak incidents have been reported since the inception of the Muhammadu Buhari Administra­tion with nine successful attempts in Benin-City, Ibadan, Jos, Owerri, Abuja, Bauchi, Kano and Kabba.

Between October 2020 and July 5, 2022, correction­al centres in 11 states and the Federal Capital Territory have witnessed several jailbreaks.

According to the Ministry of Interior, a total of 1,993 inmates were freed from two Nigerian Correction­al Service Custodial Centres in Benin City and Oko in Edo State in October 2020.

WAY FORWARD

Sir Okelana said we cannot continue in the past ways that have yielded no results. “We need technology for crime detection and prevention. We have to circularis­e our security system, improve on our human resources, intelligen­ce gathering and equipment. Fighting crime doesn’t rely on human efforts alone. Artificial intelligen­ce is recommende­d.``

The question of leadership under the situation is also the solution Senator Shehu Sani has offered.

Taking a bird’s eye view of the overwhelmi­ng security situation in the country following Tuesday’s attack of the presidenti­al convoy and Kuje correction­al center, he tweeted on Thursday: “THE Attacks on military formations, Police Stations, Prisons, Election commission offices are attacks on symbols, institutio­ns and pillars of the state. They are not soft targets. The nation is at war with multiples of organised guerrilla terror groups aiming at power. WE NEED A LEADER!”

For complete solution to the pervading terrorism, Ndume suggests that the executive, legislatur­e and judiciary must operate inter-dependentl­y with transparen­cy and accountabi­lty law making, their execution and interpreta­tion all work for the common good of Nigerianns.

“The president ought to sit people down and get results. He should be talking to Nigerians and not his advisers. You mean people can come in here in Abuja, attack and get away with it.? The President should give marching orders to the National Security Adviser, NSA, the Security Chiefs to get the Kuje prison escapees.

The present scenario has also made the call for state and community policing to be timely as the government will be doing Nigerians a lot of good if the call is revisited.

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