By Adekunle Adekoya
If it’s not over, then it’s not over, and therefore we cannot stop talking about it. We cannot, indeed, we must not stop talking about a problem that threatens our very existence. It is trite to restate that as at this time, majority of Nigerians are feeling insecure, what with the news of killings and kidnappings in various parts of the country continuing to dominate news headlines. Things are so bad, security-wise, that people are getting benumbed by news of killings. If Boko Haram strikes and kills people in Borno now, the reaction of an average Nigerian would probably be: “Na today?”
That reaction means we are used to getting killed by mindless, Luciferous gangs of killers on a blood-sucking mission. They are on repeated missions to kill people and execute other sinister agenda.
Despite repeated assurances, no less than eight (8) vigilante operatives were killed in an ambush by gunmen in Kanam Loval Government Area of Plateau State last week. And that is despite the presence of a military task force, Operation Safe Haven, OPSH, in the state. In fact, it was the spokesman of the task force, one Major Samson Zhakom, that gave information about the ambush to newsmen. That is reactive, if you ask me.Elsewhere in the country, bandits mounted an attack
in Faskari, in Katsina State, while in Rivers State, suspected kidnappers
escaped with bullet wounds while the Police rescued the victim. Same story,
every day, every week, only the location changes. In some instances, the
locations don’t even change, as in the case of Benue and Plateau states. It
seems the killers are sworn on a mission to drink the blood of every indigene
in these two states, to the last drop.
But what
baffles me is the seeming lack of synergy among many institutions of state that
have one role or the other to play in the area of security. First, kidnappers.
This must be the only country in the world where people are abducted and the
kidnappers make calls to the families of their victims, demanding ransom, and
yet, the kidnappers go away with their ransom. In many cases, ransom was paid
and still, the victims were killed. After making calls demanding ransom, the
kidnappers, from where I’m sitting, have given themselves away. But that does
not seem to be the case with our security apparatus.
Cast your
mind back to the agony all of us went through — and many are still going
through it — when government mandated that telephone SIM cards must be
registered, complete with biometrics. Thereafter, came the directive that the SIMs
must be linked with the owner’s National Identification Number, NIN. Wahala
over that is yet to abate. After going through all these, how come kidnappers
are able to make calls, demand and get ransom, and still walk free? Let’s leave
that for a moment.
The
internet is a worldwide enabler that guarantees access to information of all
kinds, once you’re connected. Available for free downloads are scores of
phone tracking applications that anyone can use to determine the location of a
caller. In addition, there are also applications, like Google Earth that people
can use to see, in full technicolour, the location of anywhere on earth. If all
these are available to commoners like me and you, I can bet my next paycheck
that superior ones are available to specialised security agencies. Is it then a
case of deliberate non-use of what is available to achieve what is desired? I
just can’t wrap my head round it.
Just as I
cannot figure out how and why Kaduna State, with the largest number of military
installations and institutions was the epicentre of insecurity occurrences
until just recently. If you remember, killings in Kaduna, particularly Southern
Kaduna, were the order of the day. There was a permanent bloodbath in that
state for years.
But if your
housemaid, recently recruited from the village misses her way and you go to the
police station nearest to you to report of a missing person, you’re likely to
be responded to by the admonition that there’s no paper with which to write the
report. And if your complaint needs a police officer to move with you, there
may be no fuel in the operational vehicle at the station. With situations like
that, how can the security scenario be properly managed to the benefit of
Nigeria’s tax-paying citizens?
Last week,
I celebrated on this page, the graduation of the first batch of 800 men of the
Special Operations Forces in Jaji, Kaduna. I then ended the piece with the hope
that we use them properly, like the nations that pioneered them have done to
the benefit of their national security. As I noted, we had a military unit
named the 72nd Special Forces Battalion, and is a special forces unit of the
Nigerian Army, stationed at Makurdi. I do not know how this unit has been
deployed to tackle the terror attacks in Benue State, its home.
I also do
not know if the unit has been used properly, which is unlikely, and may have
led to the conception of a different special operations unit entirely, like the
one that just graduated a fortnight ago. Therefore, if we had free Google
Earth, and other applications that can be used to battle insecurity and we have
not used them, and we had the 72nd Special Forces Battalion, and we did not use
them well, there is very little hope that the recently graduated Special
Operation Forces will be used well. We’re just going round in circles like
someone seated in a barber’s chair. Time to wake up.
*Adekoya is a commentator on public issues
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