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Bandits kill one, abduct 14 in Zamfara communities

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Bandits kill one, abduct 14 in Zamfara communities

By: Zagazola Makama

Armed bandits have killed one person, injured three others, and abducted at least 14 villagers in separate attacks on Jangebe and Keta communities of Talata Mafara and Tsafe Local Government Areas of Zamfara State.

Zagazola learnt that the first attack occurred at about 4 a.m. on Sunday, when a group of heavily armed bandits invaded Fakon Idi area in Jangebe District of Talata Mafara LGA.

“The bandits shot dead one person and injured three others before abducting four individuals to an unknown destination,” the sources stated.

“Upon receipt of the distress call, troops of Operation Fansa Yamma, police and local vigilantes mobilised to the scene and engaged the bandits in a fierce gun battle, forcing them to retreat into the nearby forest,” said the sources.

Sources said the corpse of the deceased had been handed over to relatives for burial, while the injured victims were receiving treatment at the Jangebe Primary Health Care Centre.

In a separate development, about ten villagers from Keta town were abducted while being forced to work on a bandits’ farm located between Keta and Kwaren Ganuwa villages in Tsafe LGA.

Sources revealed that at about 12:05 p.m. on Sunday, another notorious bandits’ kingpin, identified as Babangida Bature Yola, stormed the farm with his gang and abducted the villagers to an undisclosed location.

Authorities said efforts were ongoing to rescue all abducted victims and restore normalcy to the affected areas.

Bandits kill one, abduct 14 in Zamfara communities

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Troops Discover Corpse with Gunshot Wound in Plateau Community

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Troops Discover Corpse with Gunshot Wound in Plateau Community

By: Zagazola Makama

Troops of Operation Enduring Peace (OPEP), Sector 3, have discovered the body of a man with a gunshot wound in Dantanko community, Bassa Local Government Area of Plateau State.

Security sources said the troops responded at about 6:50 a.m. on June 16 following a report of a suspicious incident in the area.

On arrival, the troops reportedly found the corpse of a man identified as Mr. Emmanuel Agara, who was confirmed to have sustained a gunshot wound.

The area was immediately cordoned off by security personnel, while the body was evacuated for necessary procedures.

Authorities said investigations have commenced to determine the circumstances surrounding the death and to identify those responsible.

Security operatives have since intensified patrols in the general area to prevent any breakdown of law and order.

Troops Discover Corpse with Gunshot Wound in Plateau Community

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Troops Arrest Seven Suspected Criminals in Plateau Hotel Raid

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Troops Arrest Seven Suspected Criminals in Plateau Hotel Raid

By: Zagazola Makama

Troops of Operation Enduring Peace (OPEP), Sector 4, have arrested seven suspected criminals during a cordon-and-search operation at a hotel in Barkin Ladi Local Government Area of Plateau State.

Security sources said the operation was carried out at about 9:45 p.m. on June 15 at Vopye Resort and Farms Hotel following credible intelligence on suspected criminal activities in the area.

The troops reportedly stormed the facility and arrested seven suspects, who were subsequently profiled for investigation.

The suspects were identified as Sanusi Aliu, 40, of Tanti in Bokkos LGA; Babangida Ayuba, 24, and Adamu Hassan, both from Gombe State; Obadiah Bulus, 25, Ayuba Bulus, 21, Danladi Moses, 20, and Hassan David, 20, all from Kaduna State.

Security sources said the suspects are currently in custody as investigations continue to determine their level of involvement in criminal activities and possible connections to other networks.

Troops Arrest Seven Suspected Criminals in Plateau Hotel Raid

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WHEN TERRORISTS MOCK THE STATE

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WHEN TERRORISTS MOCK THE STATE

By Sa’adiyyah Adebisi Hassan

A retired Major General is kidnapped and dies in captivity. Soldiers are ambushed and killed in Kaduna. Troops are attacked in Borno. Farmers are slaughtered in Zamfara. Villages continue to live under the shadow of fear. Families sell their property to pay ransom. Children grow up knowing the sound of gunfire better than the sound of peace. Yet the Nigerian state continues to behave as though these are isolated incidents instead of symptoms of a national security emergency.

At what point do we stop pretending?

At what point do we stop calling this “security challenges” and start admitting that armed criminal groups have become bold enough to openly challenge the authority of the Nigerian state?

Because that is exactly what is happening.

The death of Major General Abubakar Rabe in captivity should have shaken every office in Abuja. This was not an ordinary citizen hidden away in a remote village. This was a retired General, a man who spent years serving the nation. If criminals can abduct and hold a retired General until he dies in captivity, what message does that send to the ordinary teacher, farmer, trader, student, doctor or civil servant?

The message is simple and frightening: nobody feels untouchable anymore.

And that is why public frustration is boiling over.

The most dangerous thing happening in Nigeria is not just that terrorists and bandits are killing people. The most dangerous thing is that they increasingly appear unafraid of the consequences. Fear is supposed to flow in one direction, from criminals toward the state. In Nigeria, that equation appears dangerously reversed. Citizens fear criminals. Criminals seem less fearful of the state.

That should terrify every serious leader.

And then there is another question that many Nigerians are asking, even if officials do not like hearing it.

How can violent criminal networks continue to communicate, negotiate ransoms, circulate videos, move money and maintain support structures without creating intelligence opportunities?

✅Modern criminality leaves footprints.

✅Phones leave footprints.

✅SIM cards leave footprints.

✅Financial transactions leave footprints.

✅Internet activity leaves footprints.

✅Movement leaves footprints.

✅Communication leaves footprints.

✅Nothing simply appears from thin air.

Which is why many Nigerians become angry when they see stories of suspected bandits or criminal sympathizers flaunting wealth online, building audiences, distributing money or creating influence networks while communities they helped terrorize are burying their dead.

Every person is entitled to due process and evidence matters. But any serious country would investigate suspicious financial ecosystems around violent criminal networks aggressively and relentlessly.

Because terrorism is not sustained by bullets alone.

✅It is sustained by money.

✅It is sustained by logistics.

✅It is sustained by information.

✅It is sustained by collaborators.

✅It is sustained by people willing to normalize evil because there is money attached to it.

✅No terrorist organization survives in complete isolation.

✅Someone supplies information.

✅Someone moves money.

✅Someone facilitates communication.

✅Someone benefits.

That is why successful counterterrorism operations across the world do not focus only on gunmen in forests. They focus on the entire ecosystem that keeps the violence alive.

Nigeria’s problem is that it often appears to be chasing the symptoms while the disease continues growing.

A kidnapping gang should not only be viewed as armed men carrying rifles.

It should be viewed as a network.

A terror cell should not only be viewed as fighters.

It should be viewed as financiers, recruiters, propagandists, informants, transporters, suppliers and digital facilitators.

Destroy the network and the gunmen become isolated.

Ignore the network and new gunmen appear.

That is the lesson serious countries learned long ago.

The second lesson is even more important: intelligence wins wars before soldiers do.

A nation of over two hundred million people should not be relying primarily on reaction. It should be relying on anticipation.

The future of security is intelligence fusion.

✅Telecom intelligence.

✅Financial intelligence.

✅Cyber intelligence.

✅Human intelligence.

✅Border intelligence.

✅Geospatial intelligence.

All operating from one integrated national threat platform.

Not twenty agencies protecting twenty databases while criminals exploit the gaps.

The truth is that Nigeria does not have a shortage of brave soldiers. It does not have a shortage of brave police officers. It does not have a shortage of brave intelligence personnel.

What it appears to suffer from is a shortage of speed, integration, accountability and coordination.

And criminals thrive inside those gaps.

That is why every major attack must trigger a hard question: what information existed before the attack, who had it, what was done with it and why did prevention fail?

Those questions are not anti-government.

Those questions are pro-accountability.

Because the purpose of security is not explaining attacks after they happen.

The purpose of security is preventing them from happening in the first place.

The greatest tragedy in all of this is that Nigerians are gradually becoming emotionally exhausted. Every day brings another headline. Another abduction. Another ambush. Another funeral. Another community attacked. Another family destroyed.

No country should normalize that.

No society should accept that.

No government should become comfortable with that.

The death of Major General Abubakar Rabe, the killing of soldiers, the slaughter of farmers and the endless stream of kidnappings are not separate stories. They are warnings. Warnings that criminals are testing the limits of state authority every single day.

The question now is whether the state intends to reclaim that authority decisively, intelligently and relentlessly or continue issuing statements while citizens continue counting the dead.

Because a nation is not judged by the speeches of its leaders.

It is judged by whether its people can live without fear.

And right now, too many Nigerians are afraid.

WHEN TERRORISTS MOCK THE STATE

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