Wednesday, July 24, 2024
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Nigeria: In Three Months, Bandits Killed 214 People, Abducted 746 in Kaduna

Kaduna — The Kaduna State Government has disclosed that 214 people were killed while 746 others were abducted by bandits from January to March 2023.

Commissioner for Internal Security and Home Affairs, Samuel Aruwan, disclosed thisyesterday while presenting the first quarter of 2023 security report to Governor Nasir El-Rufai, at the Government House, Kaduna.

The report showed that Kaduna central senatorial district recorded the highest number of casualty with 115 deaths followed by Kaduna South and Kaduna North senatorial districts with 61 and 38 deaths respectively.

The report also indicated that of the 746 people kidnapped, Kaduna central senatorial district accounted for 492 victims followed by Kaduna south senatorial district with 221 while 33 people were abducted in Kaduna north senatorial district.

Receiving the report, El-Rufai said, the state government did its best to prevent the sad incidents “through institutional measures and pragmatic actions.”

He appealed for intense security operations over the remaining 39 days of the current administration and beyond to ensure that, “the change of baton at the federal level does not result in a dangerous lull that criminal outlaws can exploit.”

According to him, “These measures include persistent pressures on the federal government to launch comprehensive and sustained military operations against the terrorists and criminal elements that are menacing our people and their lives, liberty and livelihoods.

“There is every reason to intensify and sustain simultaneous ground and air kinetic actions across the seven frontline states of the Northwest region and Niger which have continuous and contiguous forest ranges and are most heavily impacted by this security challenge.”

The governor, who promised that the state government would continue to do everything within the powers of a state to ensure security, added: “We have invested considerable resources and energy in managing security to the extent that the Constitution of our nation permits a subnational.

“Our interventions since 2015 include supporting the federal security agencies deployed in our state with vehicles and other logistics, collaborating with other frontline states to fund military operations in the 2015-2016 period and investments in security infrastructure and technology.

“The lessons learnt in the 2016-2019 period informed our decision to establish the first sub-national Ministry of Internal Security and Home Affairs at the beginning of our second-term in 2019.

“The mandate of the Ministry is to manage the state government’s relationship with the federal security agencies deployed in the state and to coordinate their activities towards securing our people in an atmosphere of unprecedented challenges,” El-Rufai said.