Sowetan

Nigeria’s farmers trapped in crosshairs of bandit attacks

People forced off their land and into camps

- Reuters

Birnin Tudu – Nigerian farmer Bashir Sanni and his neighbours hoped they could buy their safety from groups of gunmen who terrorise the north west with kidnapping­s for ransom and extortion.

Residents of his village Birnin Tudu clubbed together to pay 10m naira (R394,000) in protection money to a local armed group – as well as buying them two motorcycle­s and a cellphone. It only stopped the attacks for a matter of weeks.

“They stormed the village and kidnapped people one night. A few days later, they came again. When they came for the third time, that was when we realised we had to flee for safety,” said Sanni, 35, who now lives in a camp for displaced people.

Nigeria’s decade-long war with Islamist insurgenci­es in the north has spawned a humanitari­an crisis and killed about 30,000 people.

Groups of gunmen, known locally as bandits, have stepped up robberies and kidnapping for ransom. They have also killed thousands of people.

The bandits, who hide out in thick forests, are expected to be a major issue in elections next February to choose a successor to President Muhammadu Buhari.

They are also increasing­ly wreaking havoc on one of Buhari’s key policies – weaning Nigeria from its dependence on oil exports by encouragin­g a return to farming, which currently accounts for 22% of the country’s gross national product (GDP).

Rural Zamfara state – whose slogan is “farming is our pride” and where the vast majority of residents work in agricultur­e – is among the hardest hit by the attacks. The state is part of Nigeria’s bread basket, contributi­ng significan­tly to national food production.

As the security crisis grows, small-scale farmers say they are being forced to flee their lands, seeing their profits hollowed out by extortion, and cannot bring their goods to market as bandits have made many roads impassable.

The attack on smallholde­r farmers, along with widespread flooding and the war in Ukraine, have pushed annual food price inflation to 24%.

“What we need is adequate security to enable us to farm and live peacefully,” said Sanni, whose family now relies on food aid to survive. “It’s only when we are safe that we can farm and take our produce to the market. Without that, our hands are literally tied.”

Bandit attacks are increasing but Nigeria’s security forces are thinly stretched fighting the Islamist insurgency in the northeast.

Last week, more than 100

‘‘ They stormed village and we had to flee for our safety

people – including women and children – were kidnapped in Zamfara, according to residents and local officials, who said the bandits may be using them as human shields in the face of Nigerian army air raids.

“Banditry is often understood as a primarily rural phenomenon,” said James Barnett, a Lagos-based researcher covering African politics and security at the US think-tank the Hudson Institute.

“However, by ravaging some of Nigeria’s biggest agricultur­al centres, banditry has impacted Nigerian lives and livelihood­s across the board, contributi­ng, in part, to the cost-of-living crisis Nigeria currently faces.”

A jump in food prices helped to drive inflation to 21% in October.

Security forces have continued to clamp down on the bandits, including air raids and a telecoms shutdown in parts of the northwest in an attempt to flush them from their hideouts. States like Zamfara, at the epicentre of the conflict, have also attempted to engage bandits in dialogue and offer amnesty. But the measures have so far failed to have a significan­t impact.

Bandits killed more than 2,600 civilians in 2021 – a jump of more than 250% from 2020 – according to the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project, a conflict data aggregator.

In the village of Gidan Ilo, farmer Umar Usman has seen the bandits take his livelihood – and his granddaugh­ter’s life.

He and his neighbours had hoped to escape attacks after paying off the bandits with 2m Naira (R79,000).

“We were living in peace with them. They usually come to our village to buy things and go. This was because we gave them anything they demanded from us.”

Their fragile sense of security was shattered when the bandits staged an armed raid in April, killing Usman’s granddaugh­ter and kidnapping many of his neighbours.

Usman and his family fled, and now live in a camp for displaced people.

His two hectares of millet and other grains have died, and the fields have overgrown with grass.

The father-of-six now manages a small piece of land near the camp.

“It is difficult to even get food to eat, not to talk of taking to the market to sell.” ■ –

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