• Home
  • Anti-Corruption
  • Fact-Check
  • Economy
  • National
  • Security
  • Features
  • State
  • Event
  • E-Book
Search
  • Home
  • About
  • Adverts
  • Contact
Sign in
Welcome! Log into your account
Forgot your password? Get help
Password recovery
Recover your password
A password will be e-mailed to you.
PRNIGERIA PRNigeria News
PRNIGERIA PRNIGERIA
  • Home
  • Anti-Corruption
  • Fact-Check
  • Economy
  • National
  • Security
  • Features
  • State
  • Event
  • E-Book
Home Features Ten Years Since Chibok – Nigeria Will No Longer Pay the Price...
  • Features

Ten Years Since Chibok – Nigeria Will No Longer Pay the Price by Bola Tinubu

By
Bola Tinubu
-
April 15, 2024
President Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu

Ten Years Since Chibok – Nigeria Will No Longer Pay the Price by Bola Tinubu

Ten years ago today, 276 girls were abducted in the night from their school in Chibok, northeastern Nigeria. The attack by Boko Haram pricked the conscience of the world. From London to Washington, protesters held placards reading #BringBackOurGirls—the hashtag the girls’ families had posted to pressure their idle government into action. It would take almost three weeks for then-Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan even to make a public announcement. Critical time had been lost.

When this March, 137 children were tragically taken from a school in Kaduna, northwestern Nigeria, the shadow of Chibok lay ever present. Why, Nigerians and the world asked, after the passage of a decade was such an atrocity still happening?

This time, unlike Chibok, the girls and boys were brought back a fortnight later, the security and intelligence agencies deployed immediately to rescue them. Nevertheless, legitimate concerns over kidnappings persist in Africa’s most populous country. Success in Kaduna has brought families relief and praise for the military, yet the government bears no illusions: The scourge of kidnappings must be routed once and for all.

It begins with recognizing the changing nature of the threat. Boko Haram translates to “Western Education is Forbidden” and reflects an ideological impetus as jihadi insurgents opposed to the very idea of a Nigerian state. Today, Boko Haram are splintered, and mass abductions are primarily the work of criminal gangs. There is no ideology here: kidnapping has become an illegal industry rewarded with ransoms. Within days of the Kaduna attack, the abductors were demanding 1 billion naira ($600,000).

Nothing was paid. As president, I have been clear that ransoms stop. Resolution through payment only perpetuates the wider problem. This extortion racket must be squeezed out of existence. Meanwhile, the costs for perpetrators must be raised: They will receive not a dime, and instead security services’ counter action.

But compressing the kidnap for ransom market only addresses the pull factors. If we are to avoid funneling the same people into other crimes that cause normal Nigerians to feel insecure, we must address the push factors: poverty, inequality, and a paucity of opportunity. Criminal gangs can find easy recruits among those without either a job, or the prospect of one.

 

Read Also:

  • There Is Something About Pantami: Power, Piety, and the Politics of Gombe State, By Baba El-Yakubu
  • Troops Arrest Suspected Suicide Bomber, Seize IED Materials in Borno
  • New Tax Laws Implementation Begins January 1, Tinubu Assures

Some 63 percent of Nigerians are multidimensionally poor. They are bearing the economic consequences of a failure by successive governments to get to grip with the Nigerian economy. Fiscal and monetary albatrosses have grounded the country’s flight, when surging demographics demand high economic growth to just maintain current standards of living.

A decades-old fuel subsidy was exhausting paltry public finances. By 2022, the cost had ballooned to $10 billion—more than the government’s combined spending on education, health care, and infrastructure in a budget of $40 billion. Currency controls that artificially propped up the naira deterred investment and led to shortages of foreign exchange. For decades we have been financially ransoming ourselves. When my government took office last May, we faced a pile of debt obligations.

 

Just as with kidnappers, we had to be tough with the economy. Unsustainable market distortions had to be removed. As expected, floating the naira caused it to plunge. Given Nigeria is a net food importer, the average shopping basket has consequently risen in price. The removal of the fuel subsidy, in a country where many businesses and households rely on generators for power, has also had far reaching effects. These reforms have caused pain across Nigeria; they are still painful. Yet there is no better alternative: These and other difficult reforms are necessary to arrest the economic rot that lies at the heart of insecurity.

Green shoots are now visible. In the first quarter of this year, foreign currency inflows have almost matched those for the whole of last year. A multi-billion forex backlog at the central bank has been cleared, giving foreign investors’ confidence to invest in Africa’s largest economy, safe in the knowledge they can repatriate earnings. The naira has begun to stabilize after its initial downward trend and has made huge gains against the dollar.

Talk of macroeconomics might seem remote from the challenge of insecurity. But without the fundamentals in place, it is impossible for an enabling environment where the private sector thrives, jobs are created, and opportunity is spread across the country. It is how we ensure children can go to school without fear.

For any who may have doubted our direction, it should now be clear. There will be no more ransoms paid—not to kidnappers, nor toward those policies which have trapped our people economically. Nigerians, and their economy, will be liberated.

Bola Tinubu is president of the Federal Republic of Nigeria

 

VISIT OUR OTHER WEBSITES
PRNigeria.com EconomicConfidential.com PRNigeria.com/Hausa/
EmergencyDigest.com PoliticsDigest.ng TechDigest.ng
HealthDigest.ng SpokesPersonsdigest.com TeensDigest.ng
ArewaAgenda.com Hausa.ArewaAgenda.com YAShuaib.com
  • TAGS
  • BringBackOurGirls
  • Western Education
Previous articleNEF: Tinubu’s Northern Appointees must Take a Stand or Exit Now – Matawalle Challenges Baba-Ahmed, Others
Next articleAgain, Nigerian Troops Intercept Gunrunner, Kidnapping Terrorists in Taraba-Benue Axis
Bola Tinubu
Bola Tinubu
Xing

RELATED ARTICLESMORE FROM AUTHOR

There Is Something About Pantami: Power, Piety, and the Politics of Gombe State, By Baba El-Yakubu

Troops Arrest Suspected Suicide Bomber, Seize IED Materials in Borno

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu

New Tax Laws Implementation Begins January 1, Tinubu Assures

Mohammed Idris

No Plans to Arrest or Detain Opposition Leaders, FG Dismisses Allegations

Army Rescues 8 Abducted Victims Along Cameroon Waterways

Police Service Commission

POLICE RECRUITMENT: Guidelines on How to Avoid Technical Errors During Online Application

Professor Ali Isa Pantami

Gombe Has Lost Its Finest – Pantami Mourns 7 Journalists Killed in Auto Crash

Abubakar Malami

Court Remands Malami, Son, Wife in Kuje Prison Over Alleged Money Laundering

Governor of Nasarawa State, His Excellency Engr. Abdullahi Sule, FNIPR performing foundation-laying ceremony of UPRL, while President of NIPR, Dr. Ike Neliaku observed

NIPR, Nasarawa Govt Perform Ground-Breaking Ceremony for PR and Leadership University

From Alliance to Fallout: How Internal Power Struggles Are Driving Gov. Abba Yusuf Away from Kwankwaso

Army Arrests 19 Oil Thieves, Destroys 22 Illegal Refineries, in N’Delta Region

Army, troops from 23 Brigade Garrison, working alongside the police, NSCDC and DSS during the operation in Adamawa

Military Eliminates Top Boko Haram Commanders in Bama Operations

Recent Posts

  • There Is Something About Pantami: Power, Piety, and the Politics of Gombe State, By Baba El-Yakubu
  • Troops Arrest Suspected Suicide Bomber, Seize IED Materials in Borno
  • New Tax Laws Implementation Begins January 1, Tinubu Assures
  • FCT Police Tighten Security Along Nasarawa–Kogi Border Communities
  • No Plans to Arrest or Detain Opposition Leaders, FG Dismisses Allegations
  • Home
  • About
  • Adverts
  • Contact
© 2020 PRNigeria. All Rights Reserved.
Latest News
There Is Something About Pantami: Power, Piety, and the Politics of Gombe State, By Baba El-YakubuTroops Arrest Suspected Suicide Bomber, Seize IED Materials in BornoNew Tax Laws Implementation Begins January 1, Tinubu AssuresFCT Police Tighten Security Along Nasarawa–Kogi Border CommunitiesNo Plans to Arrest or Detain Opposition Leaders, FG Dismisses AllegationsArmy Rescues 8 Abducted Victims Along Cameroon WaterwaysPOLICE RECRUITMENT: Guidelines on How to Avoid Technical Errors During Online ApplicationGombe Has Lost Its Finest - Pantami Mourns 7 Journalists Killed in Auto CrashCourt Remands Malami, Son, Wife in Kuje Prison Over Alleged Money LaunderingNIPR, Nasarawa Govt Perform Ground-Breaking Ceremony for PR and Leadership UniversityFrom Alliance to Fallout: How Internal Power Struggles Are Driving Gov. Abba Yusuf Away from KwankwasoArmy Arrests 19 Oil Thieves, Destroys 22 Illegal Refineries, in N'Delta RegionMilitary Eliminates Top Boko Haram Commanders in Bama OperationsANALYSIS: US Airstrikes, Counterterrorism and Nigeria's SovereigntyAfter AFRICOM's Attacks in Sokoto, NAF Shells IED Factory and Bandit Enclaves in Zamfara
X whatsapp