The pan-Yoruba socio-cultural and socio-political organisation, Afenifere, has raised an alarm over the resurgence of kidnapping, banditry, attacks on security officers and continuous herders and farmers clashes.

The organisation, in a press statement issued yesterday by its National Publicity Secretary, Comrade Jare Ajayi, recalled that reports of kidnapping for ransom, killings, attacks on security officers as well as clashes between herders and farmers became more rampant in the last few days.
According to Afenifere, “There’s no doubt that the Government appreciates the need to prevent terrorism, as exemplified by the enactment of the Terrorism (Prevention) Act, 2011 (TPA) as amended by the Terrorism (Prevention) (Amendment) Act, 2013 (TPAA).
“The Act makes it an offence to commit a terrorist act, be a member of a terrorist group or provide support to such a group. It states, among others, that a person commits an offence of terrorism if he “(a) provides money or other property, and (b) knows or has reasonable cause to suspect that it (the money) will or may be used for the purposes of terrorism.”.
Afenifere added, “Unfortunately, going by how terrorism activities grew between 2011 when the law was first passed and up till 2023, it cannot be said that the Act was made to achieve its objective.
“A newspaper report of June 29, 2024 indicated that 24,816 Nigerians were killed and 15,597 persons abducted during the two terms of President Buhari.
“The resurgence has led to the abduction of about 1,290 Nigerians within the first half of this year, according to the same report cited above. The fact that kidnapping and related banditry have resurfaced in recent months is a testament that the government needs to take urgent steps to enforce the said law”.
Ajayi further stated that “Instances of how the State has failed to implement the said law included its failure to prosecute five Nigerians mentioned by the United Arab Emirates (UAE) around 2022 as sponsors of terrorism.
“Last Sunday, three Indian nationals and a Nigerian were abducted on Sagamu-Ijebu-Ode Expressway; Dr. Tiri Gyan David, a lecturer at the Federal University Dutsinma (FUDMA), in Katsina State, was last Tuesday killed in his residence and his two children abducted; penultimate Tuesday, the military, in a counter-terrorism operation, repelled an attack by suspected terrorists on Isheke Police Station in Ebonyi State; herders attacks on communities in Benue, Plateau, Niger and Oyo States etc, still continue, just as kidnappings also occur in Sokoto, Katsina, Nasarawa and parts of Oke-ogun in Oyo State, among others.
“Around May 21 this year, 40 people were reportedly kidnapped at Zurak village in Wase LGA of Plateau State. Early this week, multiple suicide bombing attacks claiming many casualties were reported in Borno State. The list can go on”.
According to Afenifere, enough lives have been lost and enough properties have been destroyed.
The Afenifere spokesman asserted that engagement with local people at various levels is very critical “because, those committing the atrocities don’t descend from heaven each time they want to perpetrate their evils. They live among or near the people. Indeed, intelligence reports have it that there were instances in which these terrorists were able to operate as a result of collaboration or connivance of some insiders”.
“As part of mechanisms to put an end to this scourge, close-circuit television (CCTV) sets, deployment of modern technology for security purposes, including drones, must be effected immediately”, he suggested.
Recall that the Director of Defence Media Operations, Major-General Edward Buba, on Thursday this week acknowledged the undesirable dimension the menace of terrorism has taken in the country, saying: “we are in a state of war”. He said this while speaking at the Strategic Inter-agency Policy Committee briefing in the Police Force Headquarters in Abuja.
Afenifere spokesman, who acknowledged the vow made by General Buba that the army is mounting counter-terrorism measures, maintained that it is high time a serious review of the country’s security architecture is carried out.
He added that the disclosure by the National Security Adviser (NSA), Nuhu Riba?u, that the Government is ready to “close up the ungoverned spaces” with a view to ousting terrorists and bandits is a welcome development.
Riba?u had made the disclosure while handing over rescued abductees from Zurmi, Duran and Gusau metropolis, in Zamfara State, on 22 April 2024 to the Secretary to Zamfara State Government, Abubakar Nakwada.
According to Afenifere, Riba?u, in the said lecture after identifying the origin and trajectory of banditry in Nigeria, stated that President Bola Tinubu is taking steps to put a stop to the menace of banditry, terrorism, kidnapping and the like.
Ajayi urged the Government to put into action those strategies he talked about. He said that the plan by the government to engage communities and plug the avenues through which terrorists recruit more members should be put into action immediately.
