Cite this article: Abubakar, A. & Auta, Y. I. 2025. “The Menus of Banditry in Kebbi State, Nigeria”. Sokoto Journal of History Vol. 13, Iss. 01. Pp. 38 – 50. www.doi.org/10.36349/sokotojh.2025.v13i01.005
THE MENUS OF
BANDITRY IN KEBBI STATE, NIGERIA
Atiku Abubakar
Department of
History and International Studies, Federal University Birnin Kebbi, Nigeria
and
Yusuf Ibrahim Auta
National Open
University of Nigeria
Abstract: Banditry is an
organized crime committed by groups of outlaws in a society. It involves the
use of threat or violence. Banditry involves crimes such as kidnapping,
extortion, stealing, robbery, murder, etc., while bandits are unlawful armed
groups, terrorizing people and confiscating their properties by force, using
dangerous weapons. In recent time, bandits are in possession of dangerous and
sophisticated weapons. Such dangerous weapons inflicted more fear and
uncertainties to local communities concerning the safety of their lives and
properties. This work using historical method of enquiry studies banditry in
Kebbi State that is located in the North-Western Nigeria. Banditry is rampant
at Danko-Wasagu, Yauri and Kalgo Local Government areas of Kebbi State. The
result of the findings of this research reveals that the nature of banditry in
Kebbi State is a disturbing one. Bandits engage in criminal activities such as
kidnapping for ransom, cattle rustling, armed robbery, theft, attacks on
travellers, traders, farmers, villages, local markets, etc., in the state. It
is evident that within the crime prone areas, many farmers cannot go to their
farms due to activities of bandits. This menace threatens the general and food
security of the nation. The study recommends massive enlightenment campaign to
sensitize members of the public on the need for all to contribute towards
solving the problem of in security in Kebbi State and Nigeria in general. All
Nigerians, regardless of religion, race, ethnic, or political affiliation
should come together and contribute their quota towards resolving the problem
of insecurity in the country.
Keywords: Banditry,
kidnapping, theft, economy, food security
Introduction
Banditry is generally viewed as an organized crime
committed by outlaws, typically involving threat or use of violence. Banditry
primarily consist of prodigious crimes such as kidnapping, extortion, stealing,
robbery, murder, etc., perpetrated by an individual or group (Iliya, 2015). Bandits
are unlawful armed groups, terrorizing people and confiscating their properties
through the use of dangerous weapons. In recent time, bandits have been seen
with dangerous and sophisticated weapons that ordinarily should not be seen in
the hands of terrorists. Such dangerous weapons inflicted more fear and
uncertainties to local communities concerning the safety of their lives and
properties.
In Nigerian, a
part from Boko Haram insurgency, banditry is the gravest security threat the
country is facing at the moment. The situation is worst in northern Nigeria,
especially in northwest geopolitical zone, which comprises Kaduna, Sokoto,
Katsina, Zamfara, Jigawa, Kano and Kebbi States. Moreover, some states in the
north-central are equally battling with those destructive elements.
The nature of banditry in Nigeria is a disturbing one.
At the moment, Bandits engage in criminal activities such as kidnapping for
ransom, cattle rustling, armed robbery, theft, attacks on travellers, traders,
farmers, villages local markets, etc. The devastating effect of banditry on
Nigerians is enormous, it is evident that many farmers in some states within
northern Nigeria cannot go to farm due to activities of bandits, this menace
threatens food security of the nation. Already, the cost of food items skyrocketed
in the local markets, as a result, many families cannot afford three square
meals in a day due to high cost of commodities in the market.
Many people
lost their loved ones, many victims are presently at kidnapper’s den, suffering
from torture and hunger, and lots of communities cannot sleep with their two
eyes closed because of the fear of bandits. Lots of local markets are closed
within the crime prone areas, people are afraid of travelling to a long
distance because bandits can strike at any time and kidnap travellers.
According to
Azeka (2021), the menace of banditry has social and economic implications, the
country has started experiencing shortage of food. Business activities
disrupted, especially within the crime prone areas, unemployment is on the
increase, killings and abductions are becoming rampant, fear of the unknown,
many children stopped going to school for fear of being kidnapped and the
schools within crime prone areas are closed. The situation is getting worse, no
one in the country, especially within crime prone areas is at ease with the
menace of banditry in Nigeria. It is not an over statement if someone points
out that this clumsy situation is threatening peaceful co-existence of
Nigerians, except something is done urgently to eradicate this imminent
disaster, otherwise, banditry will consume many Nigerians and throw the country
into awkward situation that would be difficult to reverse. Kebbi State is
another hub for banditry. The activities of bandits is increasing in the state,
many villages in some local governments within the state are desolated because
of frequent bandit attacks.
Definition of Terms
Banditry: Banditry is an
organized crime committed by criminals typically involving the use of threat or
violence. In other words, banditry is a criminal activities involving robbery,
murder, rape, extortion etc. perpetrated by an individual or groups.
Bandit: Bandit is a
member of armed group of criminals who attack innocent people and steal their
belongings. A person who engages in banditry is known as bandit and usually
commit crimes such as armed robbery, kidnapping, murder, etc.
Kidnapping: Kidnapping is
an act of deliberate abduction of an individual or group of people and hold
them captive until ransom is paid, or kidnapper’s demands are met. In other
words, kidnapping is a criminal activities consisting of the unlawful taking
and carrying away of a person, or group of persons by force to unknown location
for the purpose of extortion, or to meet-up certain demands.
Extortion: Extortion
simply means the practice of collecting money or other properties from the
owner by the use of force or threats. Extortion is the wrongful or illegal use
of threat, force, violence or intimidation to obtain money, property or
anything of value from innocent people.
Cattle Rustling: Cattle
rustling, also known as cattle raiding, it is an act of stealing live cattle,
often several or many at once. In addition, cattle rustling occurs when a group
of persons plan, organize and steal livestock forcefully from another person or
grazing field for illegal commercial gains.
Armed Robbery: Armed robbery
is an aggravated form of theft that involves the use of weapons to perpetrate
violence and intimidation against the victims. It is an act where the use or
threat of force involves a firearm, an imitation firearm or an offensive
weapon. Moreover, armed robbery is a form of robbery in which the robber is
armed with dangerous weapon.
Murder: Murder is the
crime of deliberately killing a person without moral justification. It is an
act of committing or abetting a serious crime that results in the killing of a
person regardless of intent.
Rape: Rape simply
refers to an act of forcing sex upon another person without their consent or
against their will. Any sex act forced by any person upon another person, or
any non-consensual sex act force on or perpetrated by both the opposite sex
against any person is said to be a rape.
Stealing: Stealing
simply means illegally taken ownership of something owned by someone else
without owner’s permission, with intention not to return it. In other words,
stealing is the act of taking another person’s property or service without the
person’s permission or consent with the intent to deprive the rightful owner of
it.
Theoretical Framework
In this chapter, Social Disorganization Theory (SDT)
is used to analyse the problem of Banditry in Kebbi State, Nigeria. The theory
was developed based on the premise that location plays a vital role in
influencing a person to commit crime. Clifford Shaw and Henry D. McKay of
Chicago School of Criminology developed social disorganization theory.
According to Mark (2015), the theory of social disorganization states person’s
physical and social environments as the primarily responsible for the
behavioural choices that a person makes. The core of social disorganization
theory is that location matters when it comes to predicting illegal activities.
According to the theory, neighbourhoods with the highest crime rates have at
least three common problems, physical dilapidation, Poverty, and higher level
of ethnic and culture mixing. Moreover, delinquency was not caused at the
individual level, but is a normal response by normal individuals to abnormal
condition. (Shaw and McKay 1942).
The exponents of this theory developed social
disorganization theory based on four specific assumptions as outlined by Mark
(2015).
The first assumption is the collapse of community
based-based controls and people living in these disadvantaged neighbourhoods
are responding naturally to environmental conditions.
The second is the rapid growth of immigration in urban
disadvantaged neighbourhoods.
Third, it is business located closely to the
disadvantaged neighbourhoods that are influenced by the “ecological approach”
of competition and dominance.
The last assumption is disadvantaged urban
neighbourhoods lead to the development of criminal values that replace normal
society values.
Social disorganization theory emphasizes that a
person’s residential area is substantial factor outlining the likelihood that
such person will become involved in criminal activities. The theory laid more
emphasis on person’s location as determinant of crime commission than person’s
individual characteristics such as gender, race or age.
History of Banditry in Nigeria
One of the reasons behind banditry in Nigeria is the
illegal mining activities in the northwest region of the country. The illegal
mining in Niger, Kebbi, Katsina and Zamfara states has triggered violent
conflicts over the control of minefields, and has led to the deaths of
thousands of people. Due to the displacement caused by the conflicts, the
people of the region engage in banditry as an alternative means of survival
(Akinyetun, 2022).
Anaruwa. gave a different version of the history.
According to him, the origin of banditry in Nigeria could be associated with
farmers/herders clashes, he said, when they were growing, there was nothing
like banditry, apart from community thieves who steal from members of the
community. He narrated further that between 1990 and 2023, Nigeria experienced
unprecedented increase in population; as a result, many abandoned lands were
cultivated in order to produce enough food for the people, leaving little land for
grazing. Moreover, it is common attitude of some herders, if they are unable to
find enough grass for their animals, as such, they allowed their animals to
feed on people’s farms. Such behaviours usually provoke farmers to take
aggressive actions against the herders. On the other hand, herders conceived
farmer’s aggression against them as not something to tolerate, they therefore
mobilized themselves to retaliate in case of any attack against their members
by the farmers. Such aggressive groups formed in the name of retaliation, later
metamorphosed into dangerous criminals (bandits) who are disturbing the peace
of Nigerians at the moment.
According Okoli and Ugwu (2019), northern region has a
long history of banditry, the first recorded case occurred somewhere between
western Hausa land and the Niger border in 1901, when 12,000 strong
camels-train loaded with assorted grains was attack, and 210 merchants killed.
Although, rural banditry is as old as Nigeria, it has nonetheless incrementally
transformed overtime from its rudimentary phase, to a complex and complication
pattern of criminality.
There are different views and versions as regards to
the origin of banditry in Nigeria. However, the genesis of banditry in Nigeria
predates colonial era. Northern Nigeria in particular was a major destination
for international trade and migration. Trans-Saharan trade was well established
within Katsina, Sokoto, Kano, Borno, and others. Moreover, there was strong
connectivity with the eastern part of the country and Benin empire in the
south-south, the major routes utilized by these traders, tourists, merchants,
caravan were occasionally stormed by bandits who robbed the travellers their
belongings. During this period, traditional institutions that have the
authority to enforce law and order failed woefully to secure those routes. As
such, the routes remained vulnerable to bandits attack, until the arrival of
colonial masters. In addition, some pre-colonial traditional rulers in the
country, in a manner unbecoming of a good leader, sent their armed men to
attack travellers, snatched their goods and bring it to them. These attacks led
to many inter-territorial wars during pre-colonial era.
Odinkalu and Stephen Ellis trace post-independence
banditry in Nigeria to “shortly before the Nigerian Civil War, when there was
broke down of government in some parts of Western Region. and there was blurred
line between political violence, crime and organized insurgency.” At the end of
the war, the military regime of Yakubu Gowon failed to manage demobilization,
as demobilized combatants from the war returned home and had nothing to do.
Disobedience to laws of the land become appealing in southern Nigeria, which
comprises a 29 percent of Nigeria’s nearly 924,000km2 of landmass, thus, urban
banditry ensued.
The argument regarding the origin of banditry in
Nigeria is enormous and endless. However one should ponder on the lingering
issues that upheld the existence of banditry in Nigeria, because banditry
started somewhere. The menace (banditry) is threatening peaceful co-existence
of Nigerians. Therefore, the focus should be on how to eliminate banditry in
the country. All hands must be on deck to eradicate this looming catastrophe in
our dear country.
Banditry in Kebbi State
Kebbi State is located in the North Western part of
Nigeria. Like many states in the country, Kebbi has its share of banditry.
Almost all states in Nigeria felt the negative impact of this unfortunate
situation. However, the menace is more devastating in northwest geopolitical
zone. Within the northwest, Zamfara, Katsina, Niger and Kebbi State are among
the most hit states. Banditry is rampant in the southern part of Kebbi State.
People living in that part of the state were attacked and are facing threats of
attacks by bandits almost on daily basis. As mentioned earlier, Kebbi State is
located in North-western Nigeria. The state shares border with Sokoto and
Zamfara states in the east and north, and to the south by Niger State, while
its western border forms part of the national borders with the Republic of
Niger and Republic of Benin. The state was created by the military
administration of General Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida in 1991. Based on 2006
census, the state has a population of 3,256,541, with projected population of
5,001,610 in 2019, based on population growth rate. The major ethnic groups in
the state are Hausa, Fulani, Chilela (Dakarkari). Other ethnic groups are
Achipawa, Dukkawa, Kambari, Kumuku, etc. The major occupations in the state are
farming and fishing, Zuru people are warriors and great farmers, and they
produce large quantity of agricultural produce annually for people of Kebbi and
neighbouring states.
Considering geographical location of Kebbi State, one
will grasp the closeness of the state to Zamfara in terms of boundary location.
It is less than 200 metres to cross border to Zamfara from Munhaye village in
Danko-Wasagu Local Government of Kebbi State. Likewise, it is less than 300
metres to cross border to Niger State from Malekachi village in Danko-Wasagu
Local Government of Kebbi State. The distance to Katsina State is also very
close. It is well-known fact that Zamfara State is a stronghold of banditry in
the northwest zone. Sharing border with Zamfara makes Kebbi State vulnerable to
bandit’s attacks that usually strike from Zamfara and Niger States.
Danko-Wasagu
Local Government Area of kebbi State is the most disposed to bandits attacks in
the state due to its proximity to the bandits prone states. currently the local
government is devastated by frequent attacks. This is connected with the fact
that the local government is a gateway to Zamfara and Niger states. Villages
located within the state border with Zamfara and Niger, such as Munhaye, Dan
Ummaru, Mai-Rai-Rai, Malekachi, Dankolo, Karen Bana, etc. are deserted because
of banditry. Many villagers relocated to safe areas, while many were killed by
bandits. It is doleful situation. Initially, those villagers produced thousand
tons of grains annually. One can imagine the economic loss associated with
banditry in the state. Moreover, the well-known bandit’s attack and abduction
of students at Federal Government College Birnin Yauri in Kebbi State in the
year 2021 is one of the attacks that exposes the vulnerability of the state to
banditry.
On 19th June
2022, TVC News Channel, on its popular television programme, “Journalist
Hangout” reported bandits attack that took place in Danko-Wasagu Local
Government area of the state, where 19 persons died and 30 others injured. In
addition, on its 7th July 2022’s edition, THISDAY Newspaper reported on how
communities in Kebbi State are lamenting on the frequent bandits attacks on the
state. The devastating effect of banditry left many families homeless, seeking
refuge in schools and other public places. National Emergency Management Agency
(NEMA 2023), published on its website that a team of NEMA officials, visited
three more local government areas of Kebbi State, affected by the menace of
armed banditry. The local governments include Ngaski, Shanga, Augie and Yauri.
The team observed huge humanitarian situation in these areas where thousands of
people are displaced from their villages.
According to Wikipedia.org (2021), an armed group
attacked eight villages in Kebbi State, north-western Nigeria, killing at least
90 people. The bandits who rode motorcycles attacked Koro, Kimpi, Gaya, Dimi,
Zuttu, Rafin Gara and Iguenge villages. The gunmen from neighbouring states,
Niger and Zamfara, also stole cattle and destroyed crops. At the moment,
victims of bandit’s attacks are in ugly and sympathetic condition in the state.
The visible refugee camps in the state are filled with displaced persons, living
with little social amenities. The lumbering situation of the displaced persons
compelled the executive governor of the state, Dr. Nasir Idris to provide forty
million naira (N40, 000,000) palliatives to the displaced persons in the state
to ameliorate their suffering, as reported by Blue Print Newspaper on 20th
September 2023.
Another area disturbed by bandits is Kuka District in
Kalgo Local Government Area of Kebbi State. Series of attacks and kidnapping
have been taken place in the area for sometimes. During physical assessment of
the situation in Kuka district, on 28th April 2024, an indigene of the area who
simply identified himself as Wakili, said that bandits are frequently
disturbing the area. According to him, Kuka District is sharing boundary with
Zogirma village in Bunza Local Government Area of Kebbi State. Zogirma village
has a large forest where bandits used to hide. Bandits usually move into the
nearby communities from the forest, kidnap people and steal their properties.
He further narrated that villages in Kuka District,
such as Kokami and Diggi are the most vulnerable to bandits attack, because
they are closely sharing boundary with Kansana village of Zogirma area where
the forest is located. Also, due to frequent attacks on their communities by
bandits, the villagers have to mobilize themselves for protection against
bandit attacks. On several occasions, the villagers confronted the bandits and
stopped them from kidnapping their victims, he added. They equally arrested many
suspected kidnappers and handed them over to security agents for prosecution.
This voluntary confession from Wakili has confirmed the disturbing situation of
banditry in the state.
Further information gathered from Kuka District
revealed that the bandits are believed to have come from the Republic of Niger,
Burkina Faso, Mali and some came from Zamfara State. They gathered around the
Gulma Hill that extends to the Kuka District, smaller hills and valleys that
made up the unoccupied lands and spaces around the area and terrorised the
people during the 2023 raining season. It took the combined efforts of the
Nigerian Army, the Nigeria Police and volunteers from various communities known
as `Yan Banga in Hausa to combat the menus of banditry in the area.
The history of banditry in Kebbi State is not complete
without mention of the abduction of 80 Students 80 students at the Federal
Government College Birnin Yauri, Kebbi State on the 17th June 2021. It took the
effort of the parents and well to-do individuals of Kebbi State origin to
secure the release of the students after they spent several months in
captivity.
The above instances and reports will leave no one in
doubt about the intensity of banditry in Kebbi State. In some parts of the
state, farmers cannot go to farms, many houses and shops were set ablaze,
bandits killed many people in the state. More on this, frequent bandits attack
forced thousands of people to flee and take refuge in schools and other refugee
camps. This ugly situation pointed to the fact that except urgent steps are
taken to exterminate this impending disaster, banditry will continue to consume
innocent Nigerians.
Causes of Banditry in Nigeria
At this stage, one may ask what are the causes of the
banditry that led to these ugly incidences? Several factors have been adduced
as the driving forces of banditry in Nigeria, especially in the north-western
region of the country. Drivers of banditry in north-western Nigeria consist in
some socio-existential conditions that characterise the interior as well as the
frontiers of the region. Prominent among these conditions are the scarcely
governed spaces, the hinterlands, forestlands, and borderlines of the region.
The north-western hinterlands are marked by extremely dispersed rural
settlements, separated by rangelands and farmlands that are susceptible to
violent contestations (Rosenje and Adeniyi 2021, quoted Gaye)
Rosenje and
Adeniyi added that the forestlands of north-western region are vast, rugged and
hazardous. Most importantly, they are grossly under-policed to the point that
makes them conducive for all forms of jungle criminality. In view of this,
violent crimes, such as banditry, have festered and thrived in such forest
areas. Moreover, most attacks occur in remote villages, close to the forested
regions in the northwest, where there is little security presence.
Another reason for the escalation of banditry in
Nigeria is that the ratio of military and police personnel to civilian
populations is grossly inadequate. According to Okwuwada (2023), Nigeria is a
prime example of a country divided along religious and ethnic lines and some
unscrupulous mentalities have taken advantage of this division to cause mayhem
with religion and injustice as a veil to hide their atrocious behaviours. The
level of suspicion amongst the tribes that form the Federal Republic of Nigeria
is both alarming and unprecedented, this has fuel tension and violence across
the country. John, et al (2023) categorized causes of banditry into three
forms:
Background causes of existing conditions, which
include poverty, ungoverned spaces, fragile security and weak border
management.
The immediate causes or triggers, which include
climate change, resource competition, informal security, Jungle Justice,
ethno-communal factors, religion intolerance, resource curse, criminality and
drug abuse.
Crisis enablers, which include state complicity,
foreign powers, traditional rulers, weapon suppliers, food suppliers,
informants and bandit’s negotiators.
These have fuelled the recent trend of armed banditry,
which remains the most prevalent threat to Nigeria’s national security.
Poverty is one of the major causes of banditry in
Nigeria, most especially in northern Nigeria. Apart from exploring the poverty
statistics provided by various rating agencies, physical observations will
leave no one in doubt about the level of poverty in north-western Nigeria. Lack
of basic amenities such as access roads, healthcare, education, clean water,
etc. are visible in most communities of the northwest. The Multidimensional
Poverty Index (MPI) of National Bureau of Statistics (NBS 2022) pointed out
that sixty five percent of multi-dimensionally poor people live in northern
Nigeria. A significant portion of this poor population are deprived of clean
water, cooking fuel, adequate sanitation and access to health care.
Furthermore, according to National Bureau of Statistic
(NBS 2022), seven out of ten Nigerians living in the rural areas are
multi-dimensionally poor, and poverty is higher in rural areas where these
attacks take place. The report further stated that seventy two percent of
people living in rural areas in Nigeria are poor. In his contribution about the
causes of armed banditry in Nigeria, Nahuche (2022) asserted that banditry has
been linked to several causes among which are: displacement due to wars in
Nigeria’s bordering countries, lack of basic amenities, unemployment among
youths, moral decadence among the youths and other members of the affected
communities.
A reporter with Premium Times, Ibrahim Adeyemi reported
on 4th April 2022, that the Centre of Democracy and Development for West Africa
(CDD) identified the key actors and drivers of the violent crime that has
killed over 12,000 and displaced over one million persons in the region. In the
report, CDD dispels reports that the violent entrepreneurs are sponsored by the
Northeast’s Boko Haram insurgents, aggrieved politicians, the Fulani
ultranationalists, or foreign powers. The report linked the crisis to overlapping
economic, political and social problems. Again, the CDD report pointed that
corruption and ineptitude among the police and Judicial officials were
identified as a reasons for taking up arms by the bandits.
Equally, highhandedness of security operatives is a
factor contributing to the violent crime, leading to an endemic killing spree
and bloodshed. The report quoted a repentant bandit who disclosed that his
father spent seven years chasing Justice for his rustled cows, detailing how
Justice was not achieved until his father died, hence, his decision to take up
arms for revenge. In addition, extrajudicial killing of innocent Fulani kinsmen
by local self-defence security outfit, known as Yan-Sa-kai compelled Fulani
militants revolting against being targets of ethnic cleansing orchestrated
attacks against members of Yan-Sa-kai, the report elaborated.
Moreover, land use disputes between farmers and
herders, leading to inter-communal clashes between the two parties is equally
driving banditry and terrorism in the region. Violence crimes influenced by
overwhelming poverty in the north-western states were also identified as a
driver and one of the root causes of banditry in region. Hapsat and Rabiu
(2022) attributed banditry and menace of cattle rustling to ungoverned space
which serves as hideouts for the criminals, weak security system, porosity of
the borders and arms proliferation. Agunyai, et al (2022) argued that the root
causes of banditry and insecurity in Nigeria are unemployment, poverty,
corruption, and the proliferation of arms.
An astonishing face-to-face discussion with a retired
police officer CSP Bitrus Gomo (Retired) on 16th October 2023, displayed
pressing issues related to the causes of banditry in Nigeria. Bitrus asserted
that with the level of corruption in Judiciary, it would be a “tale by
moonlight” for someone to anticipate end of banditry in the near future. He
added that on several occasions, his team arrested bandits and charged them to
court after establishing evidences against them. But they (bandits) were
released by corrupt judges after collecting gratification, as alleged. Those
released bandits will continue with their contemptuous act of harming innocent
Nigerians, knowing fully that they would be released whenever arrested by
security personnel. According to Bitrus, the awkward attitudes of some corrupt
judicial officials discourage security personnel from redoubling their effort
in fighting banditry in the country.
Again, an important point to note concerning the
escalation of banditry in Nigeria is that the security personnel saddled with
the responsibility of fighting banditry are not well-equipped. In many
instances, these criminals hold more sophisticated weapons than conventional
security personnel. Sadly, in most of their encounters, security personnel
recorded more casualties than the criminals. On 21st November 2023, Crime
Channels News (online edition) quoted Inspector General of Police Kayode
Egbetokun lamenting inadequate man-power and lack of operational facilities for
the police. The IGP who was speaking on the floor of the House of
Representatives while participating in the sectorial debate, opened up that
Nigerians shouldn’t be expecting an effective performance from the police force
because the force has been virtually abandoned and left ruined, with
ill-motivated personnel for many years. Moreover, the IGP added that some
police stations have no single operational vehicle to carry-out their routine duties.
Moreover, on 15th July 2020, Premium Times reported that a former commander of
Operation Lafiya Dole in Nigerian Army, Major General Olusegun Adeniyi appeared
in a video complaining about poor equipment after attack by Boko Haram
terrorists left dozens of soldiers dead.
Equally, on 21st November 2023, Daily Post News reported
that the Chief of Defence Staff Christopher Musa blamed the judiciary for
releasing arrested criminals after being arrested by security personnel. The
Chief of Defence Staff made the blame on the floor of national assembly while
participating in sectorial debate. He equally blamed the judiciary for putting
the lives of security personnel and their family members at risk by releasing
criminals that would later hunt for those security personnel who arrested them.
Critical analysis of the scholar’s views about the
causes of banditry in Nigeria will compel someone to strongly outline factors
such as abject poverty, ungoverned spaces, unemployment, youth restiveness,
corruption, poor leadership style, frequent herders-farmers clashes, high level
of illiteracy, unchecked arms proliferations, moral decadence, poor parental
upbringing, injustice and lack of political will to end banditry, corruption
etc. as major causes of banditry in Nigeria.
A point to note is the way traditional leaders are
honouring celebrated bandits with chieftaincy title. As widely transmitted in
2022, The Punch Newspaper reported that the district head of Sabon Birnin
Yandoto in Zamfara State, Alhaji Aliyu Marafa conferred the traditional title
of Sarkin Fulani on a repentant bandit kingpin Adamu Aleru. The conferment
attracted condemnation across the nation, under normal circumstances,
chieftaincy title should be conferred on personalities based on their selfless
service to humanity. But, in a situation where a repentant bandit is given
chieftaincy title, it is directly or indirectly encouraging other people to
engage in banditry.
Moreover, bandit`s informants have contributed
immensely on the escalation of banditry in Kebbi State and the country at
large. It is an unfortunate situation, informants are responsible for
kidnapping and killing of many innocent Nigerians, without informants, bandits
will find it difficult to operate. While trying to describe the clumsy nature
of bandit’s informants, Ibrahim (2021) asserted that they (informants) dine and
wine with people, they are sons of the soil, yet they sell out their own people
to Boko Haram terrorists and marauding bandits. When they are caught, they are
called “informants” but they are really collaborators and accomplices of the
armed groups.
Effects of Banditry
There are many negative consequences for banditry. It
poses a serious security threat, not only to the northwest region but to
Nigeria at large. The level at which bandits operate within the landscape of
Nigeria’s northwest and Kebbi State in particular has led to spree of
kidnapping, maiming of people, loss of lives, population displacement, loss of
cattle, disruption of socioeconomic activities in general, and equally brought
about an atmosphere of uncertainty (Musharafa and Oluwatobi 2022).
Odalonu (2023) stated that banditry has led to the
displacement of residents, payment of huge ransoms, abandonment of means of
livelihood, shortage of food, and has triggered an adverse socioeconomic crisis
for the people. According to Uche and Okwukwe (2023), banditry and kidnapping
activities have a significant negative effect on educational activities in
north-central Nigeria and educational activities have a very low tolerance for
banditry and kidnapping activities.
Further, John, et al (2022) noted that bandit attacks
in the north-west have resulted in the deaths of many civilians, especially in
the rural communities of which cases are largely underreported by the
government media and security agencies. According to them armed bandits killed eight
thousand three hundred (8,300) people, including seven in Jigawa, one thousand
nine hundred and seventeen in Kaduna, one thousand four hundred and sixteen in
Katsina, two hundred and two people were killed in Kebbi, six hundred and forty
four in Sokoto, and four thousand one hundred and fourteen in Zamfara, between
January 2013 and March 2022.
Another consequence of banditry in Nigeria is
increased in poverty and inflation rate, according to report by National Bureau
of Statistics in September 2023, the headline inflation rate increased to
26.72%, relative to August 2023 head line inflation rate which was 25.80%.
Furthermore, on the average, four out of ten individuals in Nigeria have real
per capita expenditure below 137,430 Naira per year. This translates to over
82.9 million Nigerians who are considered poor by national standard.
Another pressing issue is the consequence of banditry
on food security in the country. According to Samson (2023), food security has been
a global concern over the years, the situation become the worst in Nigeria due
to high level of insecurity, incessant killing of farmers by herders, and
uprising activities of bandits in the country. Yusuf and Abdulrahman (2021) added
that the menace of banditry does not only pose a threat to national security
but also threatens the prospects for food security in the country, as it
prevents both crop farming and cattle rearing activities. The unprecedented
rise in banditry has displaced farming communities and decreased food
production.
Another sector that is badly hit by banditry is
education, the incessant kidnapping of students across the country inflicted
fear in the minds of both parents and students. In some crime prone areas,
parents are afraid to enrol their wards in schools due to fear of the unknown.
Frequent attacks and abductions of students and their staff in educational
institutions across the country are disturbing. Henry and EJike (2023) postulated
that roughly, 1,591 school-children have been kidnapped in Nigeria since 2015,
when terrorists first abducted 276 students from Chibok, Borno State. More than
276 members of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) were kidnapped by
bandits between from 2014 and October 2023.
According to Ajayi (2015), no development can be
achieved in any nation characterized by conflicts and war. Insecurity and
national development are like twins because they are inseparable concepts that
affect each other. Peace and Gladys (2022) asserted that the increasing
insecurity situation is now in a state where kidnapping has become the norm,
destruction of lives and property has become daily reoccurrence, affecting all
efforts to achieve sustainable development in Nigeria.
As mentioned earlier, while discussing the effect of
banditry in Nigeria, Anaruwa (2023) stated that he was once kidnapped in his
farm at the outskirts of his village; unspecified amount of money was paid
before his released. Compassionately, he narrated how he abandoned some of his
farms due to their vulnerability to bandit`s attack. Anaruwa further stated
that before 2018, he produced over fifty tons of grains every year. But with
the unprecedented increase of banditry in the area, at the moment, he hardly
produce ten tons of grains in a year.
In addition, before the disturbing activities of
bandits in Kebbi State, Zuru Emirate produced over fifty percent of
agricultural produce of the state. Farmers in Zuru supplied grains to
neighbouring states, such as Sokoto and Zamfara. However, as a result of
banditry, they have resolved to subsistence farming, where they produce for
their personal consumption only. Sometimes, what they produce is far from being
enough to feed their families, Anaruwa added.
Strategies for Eliminating Banditry
According to Chukwuma and Anthony (2019), to tackle
the menace of banditry, there must be conscientious effort at policing the
gamut of forested landscapes of the region, regulation of trans-border
activities at the frontiers, harnessing the transhumance and mining sectors of
the region, and controlling the spate of arms proliferation in the prone areas.
The scholars equally emphasize on the need to undo the extant drivers and
contours of rural banditry in the northwest through an adroit security strategy
that prioritizes proper territorial governance. In addition, this strategy must
recognize and prioritize the need to systematically unravel and negate the
entirety of socio-structural and existential factors that drive and sustain the
occurrence. This is in line with theoretical framework earlier discussed in a
section of this research.
It is unfortunate that criminals have taken arms
against innocent Nigerians in form of banditry. The activities of these
criminals (bandits) are threatening the corporate existence of Nigeria as a
country. In his bid to provide way forward to this ungainly situation, Okoro
(2021) itemized four strategies to be adopted in order to end banditry in the
nation as follows:
The Federal Government of Nigeria needs to investigate
and unveil the identities of these bandits for easy prosecution.
The Federal Government must ensure that the law
enforcement agencies as well as the Judiciary are equipped and made fervent in
tackling the menace of banditry with a view to ensuring the maintenance of
Nigeria’s national security.
Ungoverned spaces across the country (borderlands,
forests, and regions, etc.) should be made governed through the use of ICT for
law enforcement agencies to monitor activities in and around them.
Monitoring of border activities by various security
and border agencies should be intensified so as to contain the vast illicit
proliferation of various calibres of arms and ammunitions into the country with
a view to enhancing the security of the nation.
In order to squarely deal with the menace of banditry
in Nigeria, Rosenje and Adeniyi (2020) recommended the following:
Nigerian government should strategize to create
meaningful employment for the youth trapped in the phenomenon, through the
creation of programmes which aim at addressing the endemic poverty in the
northwest in particular and country in general.
Nigerian government should sustain the military
efforts in prosecuting the war against banditry, as well as equip the security
forces with both types of modern equipment and necessary incentives to enable
them carry out their duty without hindrances.
There should be re-orientation to include ethical
values and reverence for life and human rights in people’s mind, and also the
need to co-exist irrespective of religious or ethnic inclinations.
Government at all levels should put in place
functional security system, like community policing to supplement the
operations of other security agencies, as well as the need for proper
orientation of the Nigerian security personnel on the need to maintain and
advance collaboration with local vigilante.
There should be adequate supply of installations of
modern technology based and gadgets, as well as increase surveillance. Border
security personnel are required to urgently check trans-border crimes, which
are part of the igniting factors accentuating banditry in Nigeria.
Debo and Temilade (2022) advocated for the use of
mercenaries to end banditry in Nigeria, the two scholars asserted that the use
of mercenaries in hostile situation is an activity that is as old as war
itself. They further gave an account of the successes of mercenaries in conflict
situations all over the world including places like Iraq, Afghanistan, Kosovo
and Syria. According Chukwuma (2019), to end banditry, there is no more
effective solution than forceful inland and frontier policing, such policing
must deal with the region’s peculiar circumstances of diverse borderlines,
forestlands and hinterlands. This requires a tactical synergy between
grassroots vigilantes and the state security operatives. Chukwuma faulted the
federal government’s current counter banditry effort, based on military
reconnaissance and raids. Such action according to Chukuma failed to bring
about the needed respite, owing largely to the operational challenges arising
from insufficient knowledge of the terrain. However, security operatives
saddled with responsibilities of fighting crime must be properly trained,
equipped and supervised.
In their contribution on how to end banditry in
Nigeria, Tahir and Usman (2021) recommended the following:
The government should improve its infrastructure,
education system, power and communication sectors, and create more employment
to the teaming unemployed youth.
There is need to enhance effectiveness of security
operatives through training and retraining of officers.
The three arms of government should be allowed to
efficiently perform their functions without undue influence.
Government needs to be proactive in resolving security
issues and threats by modern methods of intelligence gathering and sharing,
preparation, logistics, encouragement and the implementation of advanced
technology to address security challenges.
On 9th December 2023, Trust Radio quoted a
Kaduna-based security expert, Group Captain Sadeeq Garba Shehu (Rtd), saying
that the government needed to put in more resources to increase the human
capacity of the military and provide equipment and training as a way of ending
banditry in the country. He further asserted that Nigeria is not spending
enough on its security, whether it is for the military, police or even for
intelligence services.
There are divergent views and opinions on how to end
banditry in Nigeria. Those views and opinions are paramount as regard to ending
banditry in the country. What we need at this point is vital synergy between
security agencies in the country, they (security agencies) must work together
to achieve success in the fight against banditry. Likewise, if banditry can
finally become a thing of the past, sanity must be restored to our criminal
justice system. The level of alleged corruption in judiciary must be checked,
arrested criminals must be punished according to the law. In addition, security
at the borders must be strengthen. Considering our porous borders, there is
need to mount surveillance cameras at our various borders to monitor the
movement of bandits in and out of the country.
Most importantly, Nigerians should acknowledged the
fact that they have serious problem in their hands that requires urgent
attention from everyone. The task of tackling insecurity is a collective
responsibility which must not be left to the security agencies and government
alone. All hands must be on deck in this task of ending banditry in our dear
country. Once again, it is worthy to note that all the banditry elimination
strategies mentioned, if well implemented will solve the problem of banditry in
Kebbi State, northwest and Nigeria as a whole.
Conclusion
Banditry is the gravest security threat that Nigeria
is battling with, and it is a serious crime that poses a security challenge to
the nation’s delicate democracy. Activities of bandits inflicted persistent
fear to Nigerians. The situation is devastating; to the extent that no one can
predict what will happen in the next hour. People’s lives and properties are
not guaranteed, the country is in situation of emergency that needs urgent
attention to address it, otherwise banditry will spare no one in Nigeria. At
the moment, farmers cannot go to farm, many villages are disserted, and people
cannot travel by road in many parts of the country. It is popular conviction
that no nation makes serious progress when its citizens live in extreme fear.
As highlighted in this chapter, many scholars outlined
the causes of banditry, its negative effect on nation’s economic, political and
educational development. Equally, recommendations were made on various
strategies to be adopted by the authority concerned to find lasting solution to
the menace of banditry in Nigeria. It is left for the government and all stake
holders to do the needful. As clearly pointed out, the issue of security should
not be left for the security agencies alone. In their own ways, all citizens
must play remarkable role on this urgent task of eradicating the menace of
banditry in Nigeria.
References
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Azeka, I. (2021) An Assessment of the Effect of
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John S. O., et al (2023) “Forces of Terror: Armed
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Nahuche, L. B. (2022) “The Nature and Consequence of
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Journal of African Studies.
Tahir A. T. and
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Governance” Zamfara Journal of Politics and Development.
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