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Nigeria Loosing Control Of NW Region (arewa) by AsiwajuNdigbo: 1:41pm On Dec 22, 2020
This month, BBC’s Hausa language service, which covers northern Nigeria, reported a remarkable story of 12 Nigerian police officers being kidnapped along the Katsina-Zamfara expressway in the country’s northwest region.

It was the latest in a growing list of attacks and kidnappings in Nigeria’s northwest that have often been underreported in Nigeria’s national media and almost hardly ever covered by international media.
For the past decade and more, Nigeria has been battling the deadly Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram in an insurgency that has cost up to 30,000 lives and displaced 2.3 million people in and around the northeast region of the country.

The group, which has carried out attacks in the country’s capital Abuja as well as in neighboring countries Chad, Cameroon, and Niger, remains very active in the northeast even after splintering into the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) and the Jamaa’atul Ahlis Sunnah (JAS), with both carrying out attacks on civilians, aid workers, and the military.

However, for the past five years, the northwestern part of Nigeria has also become gradually engulfed by violence, with much less media coverage because these attacks have been carried out by groups that have been described locally as “bandits”. These are not Islamist terrorist groups with international affiliations which would more easily capture the imagination of global media.

Bandit is used here as a catch-all term to describe numerous groups that have carried out vicious attacks on local communities, killing scores of people, and have also been kidnapping as many as they can for ransoms. Zamfara, Katsina, and Kaduna states are the epicenters of the growing crisis.

The genesis of the lawlessness is not as clear-cut as the Boko Haram insurgency as it is a combination of various factors.

The northwest region makes up just over a quarter of Nigeria’s landmass and is composed of seven states, including some of Nigeria’s poorest. Zamfara and Sokoto have high poverty rates like in the northeast. But unlike the northeast, the northwest region is more homogenous in terms of ethnicity and religion: with the exception of the southern part of Kaduna State and parts of Kebbi State, it is mostly peopled by the Hausa and Fulani ethnic groups, and mostly Muslim.

Most of the actors are Fulani, the ethnic group that spreads across West Africa and is known for being nomadic pastoralists, while the communities being attacked are mostly Hausa farming communities. The current violent dynamic started soon after vigilante groups formed from the Hausa communities for security purposes carried out extrajudicial action against Fulani pastoralists as tensions mounted from increasing competition for land and water resources between the pastoralists and the farmers as the effects of climate change exacerbate.

This has all coincided with an increase in cattle rustling in the region by armed gangs, again mostly Fulani, using increasingly sophisticated weapons and staging attacks from nearby forests. It is these gangs that have now been attacking communities and killing indiscriminately in a bid to exact revenge. There is also a nexus between the banditry and illegal gold mining in Zamfara state, with the miners accused of being collaborators but have also fallen victims to the armed gangs.

“The population in the state, which is mainly made up of herders and farmers, have been affected heavily as they have been unable to carry out their economic activities,” says Yusuf Anka, a political commentator based in Gusau, Zamfara’s state capital. “There is arbitrary taxation on the communities by the bandits before they can plant and harvest crops. Everyone in Zamfara has suffered a personal loss to this banditry.”

Given there is very little or even no state presence in most parts of the northwest region beyond its state capitals and major towns, it has become very easy for non-state actors to run rampant in the deep rural areas. It is made worse by the fact the nearby national border in the region is very porous and for many years has become a conduit for smuggling illicit drugs, weapons, and even humans. Together with a high rate of unemployment and poverty, these factors have served to ignite and sustain the seemingly unending cycle of violence.

“It has been terrible in Zandam in the Jibia local government area of Katsina state, where we’ve experienced about five attacks in the last year,” says Gidado Suleiman Farfaru, a local civil society activist in Katsina. “All the resources of the community have been wiped out.” He said three people were killed in these attacks; and another nine people have been reported as kidnapped.

An uncertain calm has returned to the farms and surrounding areas after the government sanctioned the deployment of 60 mobile policemen in the village for the last two months, says Farfaru. The BBC story of the police kidnapping highlights the risk for even uniformed security officials.
But the disruption is not limited to rural areas anymore as there have been numerous kidnappings on major highways in the region and even attacks in cities: for example, traveling on the 190-kilometer expressway linking Nigeria’s capital Abuja and Kaduna is fraught with risk due to the high rate of attacks on travelers. This has made the train link the safer choice for traveling and even an air shuttle service being mooted.

“The deteriorating state of security in the region has also provided opportunities for jihadist groups to take advantage,” says Murtala Abdullahi, a climate, conflict, and security reporter with Humangle News. “There have been reports of the Boko Haram factions trying to extend their reach from the Lake Chad region while groups active in neighboring countries such as Mali, Niger Republic, and Burkina Faso are getting increasingly active close to the region.”

The insecurity is also impacting Nigeria’s agricultural production and food security with more farmers abandoning their farms due to fears of being attacked.

“The insecurity in the northwest is causing significant problems for farmers. In many areas, they now pay bandits to have access to their farms in order to harvest—with fees often ranging in the hundreds of thousands of naira,” says Ikemesit Effiong, the head of research at SBM Intelligence, a geopolitical consultancy based in Lagos. “Even with this quasi-taxation, security is not always guaranteed.”

Effiong is worried about a fast deteriorating situation. “Food insecurity is now a national emergency and the federal and state governments in the northwest need to urgently and closely cooperate to re-establish an adequate security presence in farming areas, so normal activities can resume.”

To be clear, in its efforts to restore security to the region, the Nigerian government has launched numerous military operations over the past four years but with an overstretched military that is deployed in multiple concurrent operations across the whole country, the impact of these operations has been very limited.

“Military approach is important but it needs to be done in a way that is not excessive and targets only the right persons,” says Abdullahi. “Other approaches need to be utilized as well, addressing surrounding issues such as justice, rural development, and state presence, and improving livelihood.”

Other approaches such as a peace deal brokered with the bandits by state governors in the region only held together for a few months before it collapsed, leading to at least one state officially pulling out of the deal. This is likely due to the fragmented nature of the actors in the conflict with so many groups involved such that it is hard to have an agreement binding on all of them.


https://www.google.com/amp/s/qz.com/africa/1935821/nigeria-losing-control-of-northwest-region-to-bandit-herdsmen/amp/

Re: Nigeria Loosing Control Of NW Region (arewa) by donbachi(m): 1:45pm On Dec 22, 2020
why wont they..carry all their military strenght and might put on south- east and south-south,where nothing is happening.neglecting the north..Python dance 1 to 5.
Re: Nigeria Loosing Control Of NW Region (arewa) by Nobody: 2:02pm On Dec 22, 2020
the Entire North is a failed region

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Re: Nigeria Loosing Control Of NW Region (arewa) by Conrod: 2:13pm On Dec 22, 2020
Its always the trend,insecurity will worsen untill the millitary can no longer cope and then islamist in nationalist toga and separatist will finally balkanize the state according to religious and tribal lines.
Re: Nigeria Loosing Control Of NW Region (arewa) by seunmsg(m): 2:19pm On Dec 22, 2020
The insecurity in the north, especially the north west is a creation of the irresponsibilities of northern leaders, elites, politicians, religious and traditional rulers. They really need to do a serious soul searching and come out to tell the rest us if they truly want peace.

The so called bandits are well know to the people and community leaders. We’ve seen pictures of north west governors with the bandits. So, why is it so difficult for them to act?

Even if the military want to use maximum force to extinguish the criminals, leaders at various levels in the north will oppose them. They either choose peace or live with the monster they are nurturing.
Re: Nigeria Loosing Control Of NW Region (arewa) by Racoon(m): 2:26pm On Dec 22, 2020
Dont negotiate with bandits and BH terrorists una no dey hear thinking you are pampering jihadist.See where it has landed the region.

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Re: Nigeria Loosing Control Of NW Region (arewa) by Racoon(m): 2:31pm On Dec 22, 2020
seunmsg:
The insecurity in the north, especially the north west is a creation of the irresponsibilities of northern leaders, elites, politicians, religious and traditional rulers.....
As usual in hypocrisy you refused to call out the president who is the C-in-C whose number one constitutional responsibility is to ensure the provision of adequate security of lives and property.

What has his government done giving that the battery of security agencies are directly under his command? Rather, he has been giving excuses and rationalizing every cluelessness of his lacklustre service chiefs as well as the atrocities of bandits/terrorists.

-1). "A fight against BH terrorists is a fight against the north..."

-2). ....BH terrorists are “mere scavengers desperate for food, raiding shops and markets, and killing innocent persons in the process....
https://www.thecable.ng/buhari-describes-boko-haram-fighters-as-scavengers-desperate-for-food

-3). "...........According to the President, however, bandits had been subjected to jungle justice by the affected communities, causing the miscreants to return to the communities to wreak havoc......"
https://punchng.com/bandits-killed-katsina-farmers-out-of-revenge-says-buhari/

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Re: Nigeria Loosing Control Of NW Region (arewa) by AsiwajuNdigbo: 5:04pm On Dec 22, 2020
seunmsg:
The insecurity in the north, especially the north west is a creation of the irresponsibilities of northern leaders, elites, politicians, religious and traditional rulers. They really need to do a serious soul searching and come out to tell the rest us if they truly want peace.

The so called bandits are well know to the people and community leaders. We’ve seen pictures of north west governors with the bandits. So, why is it so difficult for them to act?

Even if the military want to use maximum force to extinguish the criminals, leaders at various levels in the north will oppose them. They either choose peace or live with the monster they are nurturing.

Arewa is nothing but a failure. Even in their islamic religion, they are failure. They are kaffirs living under guise of Islam.
Re: Nigeria Loosing Control Of NW Region (arewa) by Ikengawo: 5:08pm On Dec 22, 2020
fokk dem
Re: Nigeria Loosing Control Of NW Region (arewa) by nthony10: 6:43pm On Dec 22, 2020
This looks like judgement on the people for the crimes committed by the leaders, however it's not wise to mock them instead pray for them.
Re: Nigeria Loosing Control Of NW Region (arewa) by Bonesking(m): 7:13pm On Dec 22, 2020
Serves north right. Lesson 101, never pamper criminals and terrorist with kids glove.

This what many of us are fighting against in Igboland. ESN or whatever they call themselves will never be allowed to thrive. We will rather help assassinate Kanu than allow a mad man and his band of zombies bring destruction to our homes.

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