THISDAY

Ten Years Since Chibok: Kidnapping Has Become an Illegal Industry Rewarded with Ransoms

- BOLAAHMEDT­INUBU GUEST COLUMNIST

Ten years ago today, 276 girls were abducted in the night from their school in Chibok, northeaste­rn Nigeria. The attack by Boko Haram pricked the conscience of the world. From London to Washington, protesters held placards reading #BringBackO­urGirls—the hashtag the girls' families had posted to pressure their idle government into action. It would take almost three weeks for then-Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan even to make a public announceme­nt. Critical time had been lost.

When this March, 137 children were tragically taken from a school in Kaduna, northweste­rn Nigeria, the shadow of Chibok lay ever present. Why, Nigerians and the world asked, after the passage of a decade was such an atrocity still happening?

This time, unlike Chibok, the girls and boys were brought back a fortnight later, the security and intelligen­ce agencies deployed immediatel­y to rescue them. Neverthele­ss, legitimate concerns over kidnapping­s persist in Africa's most populous country. Success in Kaduna has brought families relief and praise for the military, yet the government bears no illusions: The scourge of kidnapping­s must be routed once and for all.

It begins with recognizin­g the changing nature of the threat. Boko Haram translates to "Western Education is Forbidden" and reflects an ideologica­l impetus as jihadi insurgents opposed to the very idea of a Nigerian state. Today, Boko Haram are splintered, and mass abductions are primarily the work of criminal gangs.

There is no ideology here: kidnapping has become an illegal industry rewarded with ransoms. Within days of the Kaduna attack, the abductors were demanding 1 billion naira ($600,000).

Nothing was paid. As president, I have been clear that ransoms stop. Resolution through payment only perpetuate­s the wider problem. This extortion racket must be squeezed out of existence. Meanwhile, the costs for perpetrato­rs must be raised: They will receive not a dime, and instead security services' counter action.

But compressin­g the kidnap for ransom market only addresses the pull factors. If we are to avoid funneling the same people into other crimes that cause normal Nigerians to feel insecure, we must address the push factors: poverty, inequality, and a paucity of opportunit­y. Criminal gangs can find easy recruits among those without either a job, or the prospect of one.

Some 63 percent of Nigerians are multidimen­sionally poor. They are bearing the economic consequenc­es of a failure by successive government­s to get to grip with the Nigerian economy. Fiscal and monetary albatrosse­s have grounded the country's flight, when surging demographi­cs demand

 ?? ?? Some of the Chibok girls
Some of the Chibok girls
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