The Borneo Post

Nigeria struggles to tame banditry in northwest

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I tried to run away when I felt the bullet hit my eye. Three of us are alive, only one died among us, then they killed others in the town.

Abubakar Aliyu

JOS, Nigeria: When dozens of gunmen raided Abubakar Aliyu’s village in central Nigeria two weeks ago, they stormed in on motorbikes, each carrying one or two attackers who opened fire and chased down residents.

By the time security forces arrived, more than 100 villagers were dead and scores of homes destroyed after gunmen targeted four villages simultaneo­usly, residents and local officials said.

Aliyu escaped the Sunday morning attack with workers on his constructi­on site, but not before he and others were shot and one colleague killed.

“I tried to run away when I felt the bullet hit my eye,” Aliyu told AFP in a Jos city hospital where he was recovering with a bandage over his face.

“Three of us are alive, only one died among us, then they killed others in the town.”

The April 10 attack on Kanam district in Plateau state was the deadliest of raids this year blamed on heavily armed criminal gangs known locally as bandits who have long terrorised parts of Nigeria.

But the raid also illustrate­s the complexity Nigeria faces to stop growing banditry that is devastatin­g communitie­s across northwest and north central states.

With roots in clashes between Fulani herders and Hausa farmers over land and resources, violence in the northwest has spiralled into much wider conflict.

Daily headlines spotlight killings, mass abductions and raids by bandits, but some data shows fatalities rival Nigeria’s long jihadist insurgency in the northeast.

Just in March and April, gangs bombed and attacked a train travelling from the capital Abuja, kidnapping dozens, attacked a security patrol killing 19, slaughtere­d dozens of local vigilantes, and stormed a set of villages killing another three dozen.

Nigeria’s military has announced offensives, including air strikes against bandit hideouts in vast forests across the northwest, but the criminal gangs are proving an elusive enemy.

Plateau state, sitting between Nigeria’s mostly Muslim north and predominan­tly Christian south, struggled with intercommu­nal clashes in the past. But attacks by bandit gangs were rare.

“Those responsibl­e, from the informatio­n and intelligen­ce we’ve gathered so far, are criminals,” Major Gen. Ibrahim Ali, the army’s 3rd Division commander in Plateau said of the attacks, blaming gangs shifting from other states.

“They are looking for safe haven, where they can take shelter and run away from our onslaught in the northwest.”

Northwest conflict?

After 12 years of fighting, Nigeria’s jihadist conflict centred in northeast Borno state has killed more than 40,000 and displaced 2.2 million more.

But recent statistics show violence in northwest and central states appears more deadly than the insurgency involving Boko Haram and an Islamic State affiliate ISWAP.

According to the research group Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project, bandit militias killed more than 2,600 civilians in 2021, an increase of over 250 percent from 2020.

It said the figure far exceeds civilian fatalities resulting from the Boko Haram and ISWAP insurgenci­es.

A Nigerian risk analysis group SBM Intelligen­ce said a tally of media reported deaths shows 782 people killed in the northwest region compared with 441 in the northeast over the first three months of this year.

But the impact goes far beyond death tolls.

Last year, bandit gangs targeted schools for mass abductions and ransom. More than 1,400 students were abducted, though most were later released. UNICEF estimates one million young Nigerians were likely out of school this year.

The UN’s migration agency IOM figures show northwest and central Nigeria had 728,000 displaced people in 2020. That number rose to 980,000 last year.

Nearly 4,000 people were displaced by the attacks in Kanam district, mostly women and children, with many fleeing to the urban centre of Dengi and nearby camps.

“The attack was never expected,” local government chairman Dayabu Ibrahim Garga told AFP. “To come to our door-step, to experience this is really traumatisi­ng.”

Jihadist cooperatio­n

Murtala Ahmad Rufai, a historian at Usmanu Danfodiyo University, who has researched banditry, said most of the land rights and justice grievances at the root of the violence were no longer at play.

“The conflict has taken a different dimension,” he said.

Several northweste­rn states have negotiated amnesty deals with bandit leaders, but most quickly fell apart.

The federal government recently characteri­sed bandit gangs as terrorists to allow the military more flexibilit­y. But the challenge is huge, especially in vast rural areas with little state presence.

Zamfara state government estimates around 30,000 bandits operate across the northwest, posing a massive task for already stretched security forces.

Last year, several northweste­rn states shut down telecoms in a bid to curtail intelligen­ce gathering and movement by bandit gangs.

But three security sources said military operations were often “piecemeal” and failed to target gangs across the region, allowing bandits to escape.

“When they are attacked in one place, they move to another,” one source said.

“They change locations depending on threats from security personnel.”

More complex for some analysts are indication­s jihadists may be increasing cooperatio­n with bandits, such as in the attack on the Abuja to Kaduna train, where explosives were used on the track.

Government officials have blamed elements of Boko Haram who shifted from the northeast to join gangs.

“Wherever there is such an increase in numbers... the level of atrocities and level of crime, of attacks will dramatical­ly increase,” Rufai said.

 ?? ?? Major General Ibrahim Ali (right) commander of the 3rd Division and of Operation Safe Haven hands over to Major General Hamza Bature a rifle as a sample of small arms and light weapons recovered recently from bandits during Operation Safe Haven and military mop up in Jos and surroundin­g areas in Plateau State in northcentr­al Nigeria.
Major General Ibrahim Ali (right) commander of the 3rd Division and of Operation Safe Haven hands over to Major General Hamza Bature a rifle as a sample of small arms and light weapons recovered recently from bandits during Operation Safe Haven and military mop up in Jos and surroundin­g areas in Plateau State in northcentr­al Nigeria.
 ?? ?? The Nigerian military under the platform of Operation Safe Haven has handed over 517 small arms and light weapons recovered recently from bandits to the National Centre for the Control of Small Arms and Light Weapons following successes in checking bloodletti­ng and insecurity occasioned by the proliferat­ion of illicit arms in circulatio­n.
The Nigerian military under the platform of Operation Safe Haven has handed over 517 small arms and light weapons recovered recently from bandits to the National Centre for the Control of Small Arms and Light Weapons following successes in checking bloodletti­ng and insecurity occasioned by the proliferat­ion of illicit arms in circulatio­n.
 ?? ?? Abubakar Aliyu sits on a bed at the Jos University Teaching Hospital where he is receiving treatment for his injuries in Jos. Clashes between Fulani herders and Hausa farmers over land and resources have long battered the region, but in recent years attacks have spiralled into much wider conflict that has left authoritie­s struggling to control violence.
Abubakar Aliyu sits on a bed at the Jos University Teaching Hospital where he is receiving treatment for his injuries in Jos. Clashes between Fulani herders and Hausa farmers over land and resources have long battered the region, but in recent years attacks have spiralled into much wider conflict that has left authoritie­s struggling to control violence.
 ?? — AFP photos ?? Nigerian soldiers load on a military truck small arms and light weapons recovered from bandits during Operation Safe Haven and military mop up in Jos and surroundin­g areas in Plateau State in northcentr­al Nigeria.
— AFP photos Nigerian soldiers load on a military truck small arms and light weapons recovered from bandits during Operation Safe Haven and military mop up in Jos and surroundin­g areas in Plateau State in northcentr­al Nigeria.
 ?? ?? Cummunity leader and Chairman of Kanam district Yusuf Dayyabu Garga (standing) tends to Yahaya Musa, a survivor of bandit attacks, at the Jos University Teaching Hospital where Musa is receiving treatment for injuries in Jos.
Cummunity leader and Chairman of Kanam district Yusuf Dayyabu Garga (standing) tends to Yahaya Musa, a survivor of bandit attacks, at the Jos University Teaching Hospital where Musa is receiving treatment for injuries in Jos.
 ?? ?? Idris Siraju, a survivor of bandit attacks sits on bed at the Jos University Teaching Hospital where he is receiving treatment for his injuries.
Idris Siraju, a survivor of bandit attacks sits on bed at the Jos University Teaching Hospital where he is receiving treatment for his injuries.

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