The Guardian (Nigeria)

NSCDC mobilises 2,220 marshals against illegal mining, seeks citizens’ support

- From Sodiq Omolaoye and Adamu Abuh, Abuja

NIGERIA Security and Civil Defence Corps ( NSCDC) has mobilised no fewer than 2,220 of its personnel as Mining Marshals to curb illegal mining in the country. Disclosing this, at the weekend, in an interactiv­e session with reporters, in Abuja, Commandant of the Mining Marshals, Attah Onoja, solicited the support of Nigerians and emphasised the outfit’s commitment to the enforcemen­t of existing laws and working with sister law enforcemen­t agencies to secure mining sites.

Onoja urged Nigerians to see the marshals as a Nigerian project, not driven by individual interest.

To secure the country’s natural resources, the Minister of Interior, Olubunmi Ojo, a few weeks ago, launched the NSCDC- led Mining Marshals, which represents the first layer of the new security architectu­re to secure the mining environmen­t.

With a command structure spread across the 36 states, the command and control office is domiciled in the Ministry of Solid Minerals Developmen­t ( MSMD), with an initial 60 operatives deployed in each state and the FCT.

He said: “The Mining Marshals will stop at nothing in ensuring full compliance to extant laws governing mining regulation­s in Nigeria, and whoever is found wanting, regardless of position or affinity to authoritie­s, the law will take its course. Nigerians must begin to know that. “It’s a rare privilege to be on such a national assignment and we will have to account for this opportunit­y. So, anybody meeting us should know that we are coming with the mindset to save the mining sector.”

According to the Solid Minerals Developmen­t Fund ( SMDF), Nigeria's mining sector boasts 44 different types of commercial­ly viable minerals worth $ 700bn, but limited capital injections, inadequate geo- mapping tools and widespread illegal mining have left the West African nation struggling to capitalise on its reserves.

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