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Has Banditry Come to Stay? Triggers, Impacts and Failures of Responses to Banditry in Northern Nigeri


Olasupo O. Thompson
Phoebe D. Awange
Modupe Obi
Olugbenga Aina
Kehinde Adeosun
Bamidele Jinadu

Abstract

This article examines the triggers, impacts and why responses to banditry has failed in
northern Nigeria. It relied solely on secondary materials elicited from literature, the social
media and media reports as well as documents from governmental and non-governmental
organisations. The article is limited to the assessment of banditry on the northern part of
Nigeria. The article finds that the triggers of banditry are multifaceted ranging from poverty,
unemployment, weak institutions and climate change with its impacts on lives, livelihood,
displacement and refugees as well as infrastructural decay. It has enormous impacts on lives,
loss of livelihoods, infrastructures and institutions and displacements, food and nutritional
security, and refugees. In spite of the responses from stakeholders from federal to local
governments and public reactions against the leaders and security agents; much have not been
achieved to end the phenomenon. The factors responsible for this are poor funding,
unemployment, saboteurs and lucrativeness of banditry and politicisation of banditry among
others. The article, hinged on the fragile state framework argues that until the triggers of
banditry are addressed, the threat may stay for a long time. The article concludes that since
the triggers of banditry like other insecurity is driven by State fragility, government must
address the symptoms of fragility in the Nigerian State. The article recommends three levels
of interventions, short term, and middle term and long term. This include addressing
unemployment, reforming and building institutions and having the political will.


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eISSN: 2787-0359
print ISSN: 2787-0367