• Home
  • Anti-Corruption
  • Fact-Check
  • Economy
  • National
    • Government
  • Security
  • Features
  • State
  • Event
    • PR Nigeria Award
  • E-Paper
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
    • Mohammed Idris Malagi, Honorable Minister of Information and National Orientation

      FG Reaffirms Non-Interference in ICPC, EFCC Operations

      ICPC Secures Conviction of Rector for Running Unaccredited Degree Programmes

      Engr Abba Babagana Dalori

      Engr Dalori Forfeits Galaxy Hospital, Petrol Station, Properties & Cash

      Chinese nationals jailed in Lagos

      Court Jails Nine Chinese Nationals for Cybercrime in Lagos

      ASUU

      Tackle Corruption, Institutional Decay – ASUU Charges FG

  • Fact-Check
  • Economy
    • NUPENG

      NUPENG Suspends Strike After Truce With FG, Labour, Oil Stakeholders

      Customs, Defence Bureau Unveil Airboat for Smuggling War

      Customs Begins Live Operations of Automated Excise Register System

      Still on the “National Single Window” Project By Abdulsalam Mahmud

      Minister of Finance Wale Edun and the Comptroller General of Customs Bashir Adeniyi decorating OP Olaniyan

      Customs Generates N3.7trn in H1 2025 as FG Targets Enhanced Private…

  • National
    • Renewed Hope and the Broadening Public Sphere By Ahmed Balarabe Sa’id

      FG to Schools: Get Certified Teachers or Lose WAEC Accreditation

      Troops Eliminate Terrorist, Rescue Kidnap Victims in Sokoto, Katsina, Kaduna

      ECOWAS debt: Court Remands Ecobank Legal Head over Perjury, defamation of…

      The Arrest of Ansaru Kingpins Mahmud Muhammad Usman aka Abu Bara’a, and Mahmud al-Nigeri aka Mallam Mamuda

      DSS Secures 15-Year Jail Term for Ansaru Leader Over Illegal Mining

    • Government
      • Renewed Hope and the Broadening Public Sphere By Ahmed Balarabe Sa’id

        FG to Schools: Get Certified Teachers or Lose WAEC Accreditation

        ECOWAS debt: Court Remands Ecobank Legal Head over Perjury, defamation of…

        Femi Fani-Kayode FFK

        Fani-Kayode Denies Interest in NFA Chairmanship

        Food Items

        Crash Food Prices – Tinubu Orders FEC Committee

  • Security
    • Military Troops in Action

      Army Rescue 17 Kidnap Victims in Kogi State

      His Royal Highness, the Emir of Ilorin and Chairman, Kwara State Council of Chiefs, Alhaji (Dr) Ibrahim Sulu-Gambari,

      Emir of Ilorin, CP Lead Special Prayers Against Insecurity in Kwara

      Troops Eliminate Terrorist, Rescue Kidnap Victims in Sokoto, Katsina, Kaduna

      The Arrest of Ansaru Kingpins Mahmud Muhammad Usman aka Abu Bara’a, and Mahmud al-Nigeri aka Mallam Mamuda

      DSS Secures 15-Year Jail Term for Ansaru Leader Over Illegal Mining

      Troops of Nigerian Army after successfully foiling an ambush by Boko Haram/ISWAP Terrorists

      Military Kills 6 Terrorists, Lose 3 Soldiers in Zamfara Ambush

  • Features
    • Renewed Hope and the Broadening Public Sphere By Ahmed Balarabe Sa’id

      Traffic officials tolling the vehicle at the scene in Abuja

      SPECIAL REPORT: Extortion, Blood and Impunity Behind Abuja’s Agbero Menace

      MUST READ: Why Everyone Should Use AI for Writing, With Pride…

      Chief of the Air Staff (CAS), Air Marshal Hasan Bala Abubakar, and delegation from the United States Institute of Security Governance led by retired Major General Miguel Castellanos,

      Nigeria, US to Expand Air-Ground Integration for Safer Counterterrorism Operations

      Kaduna-Abuja Railway: An Urgent Call for Improved Maintenance and Security Compliance…

  • State
    • Military Troops in Action

      Army Rescue 17 Kidnap Victims in Kogi State

      His Royal Highness, the Emir of Ilorin and Chairman, Kwara State Council of Chiefs, Alhaji (Dr) Ibrahim Sulu-Gambari,

      Emir of Ilorin, CP Lead Special Prayers Against Insecurity in Kwara

      Troops Eliminate Terrorist, Rescue Kidnap Victims in Sokoto, Katsina, Kaduna

      ECOWAS debt: Court Remands Ecobank Legal Head over Perjury, defamation of…

      Troops of Nigerian Army after successfully foiling an ambush by Boko Haram/ISWAP Terrorists

      Military Kills 6 Terrorists, Lose 3 Soldiers in Zamfara Ambush

  • Event
    • Baze University Management visits TETFUND, Showcases Tech-Driven Growth, National Impact

      PHOTOS: BUK Alumni Association Launches Digital Hub to Unite Global Graduates,…

      Founder Image Merchant Promotion Ltd, Yushau Shuaib, Nigeria Customs CG, CGC Bashir Adewale Adeniyi and the IPRA representative during the 2024 GWA awards in Belgrade, Serbia

      Again, ​IPRA Shortlists Nigeria Customs, IMPR for Golden World Awards, Celebrates…

      BUKAA Announces 2025 AGM at BUK New Campus: Join In-Person or…

      Vice President Kashim Shettima and President Bola Ahmed Tinubu

      Shettima at 59: Tinubu Hails VP’s Loyalty, Commitment to Service

    • PR Nigeria Award
  • E-Paper
Home Features Nigeria’s Security: Between Self-defence and Community Policing, By Mukhtar Ya’u Madobi
  • Features
  • National
  • Security

Nigeria’s Security: Between Self-defence and Community Policing, By Mukhtar Ya’u Madobi

By
Mukhtar Ya'u Madobi
-
May 4, 2025
DSS Boss Oluwatosin Ajayi and Gen TY Danjuma
DSS Boss Oluwatosin Ajayi and Gen TY Danjuma

Nigeria’s Security: Between Self-Defence and Community Policing

By Mukhtar Ya’u Madobi

As Nigeria continues to battle worsening security challenges—ranging from banditry and kidnapping to terrorism, insurgency, and communal violence—citizens across the country are increasingly embracing grassroots security measures and calls for self-defence.

These challenges are not confined to the North. In the South, militancy, piracy, secessionist agitations, cultism, and cybercrimes further complicate the nation’s fragile security landscape.

Speaking at the maiden annual lecture of the National Association of the Institute for Security Studies, themed “Mobilising Stakeholders to Curb Insecurity in Nigeria: A Practical Approach,” the Director-General of the Department of State Services (DSS), Oluwatosin Ajayi, stressed the need for communities to take greater responsibility for their own security. He cited examples where local populations had historically repelled insurgents and urged communities to work closely with security agencies to counter threats such as terrorism, banditry, and kidnapping.

Ajayi noted that it is unrealistic to expect security agencies to protect every citizen across Nigeria’s expansive territory. He argued that communities must serve as the first line of defence, and that empowering them would enhance grassroots resilience while reducing overreliance on federal forces.

Echoing this position, former Chief of Defence Staff, General TY Danjuma (rtd), recently renewed his longstanding call for Nigerians to rise in self-defence against non-state actors. Reacting to fresh waves of violence in Plateau, Benue, and other states, Danjuma insisted that citizens can no longer afford to remain passive while bandits and terrorists wreak havoc.

“The warning I gave years ago remains valid. Nigerians must rise and defend themselves. The government alone cannot protect us,” he said.

This message of self-defence has increasingly resonated across vulnerable communities, reflecting the harsh reality of an overstretched security system that leaves millions exposed. The roots of the crisis lie in decades of state neglect, porous borders, weak intelligence systems, and economic exclusion.

In the North-West, states such as Zamfara, Katsina, and Kaduna are under siege by bandits who raid villages, rustle livestock, extort ransoms, and impose levies. In the North-Central region, particularly Plateau and Benue, farmer-herder conflicts have morphed into sustained ethno-religious violence. The South-East contends with secessionist violence linked to IPOB/ESN elements, who often target security infrastructure. Meanwhile, the South-West and South-South struggle with cultism, ritual killings, and piracy.

One chilling episode was the abduction of more than 280 schoolchildren in Kuriga, Kaduna State, in March 2024. Although the children were eventually rescued, the incident laid bare the glaring weaknesses in Nigeria’s security infrastructure and left the community traumatized.

Faced with these realities, several states have begun taking their destinies into their own hands. In April 2025, the Kano State Government passed the Security Neighborhood Watch Law to create a legal framework for community-led security efforts. Katsina has trained local vigilantes through its Community Watch Corps, while in Zamfara, Governor Dauda Lawal launched the Community Protection Guards (CPG), a controversial but welcomed initiative in rural areas long neglected by formal forces.

In the North-East, the Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF) continues to support military efforts against Boko Haram, leveraging local knowledge and swift response capabilities. The Amotekun Corps in the South-West, headquartered in Ondo State, has addressed critical security gaps in the region, earning both criticism and praise. Similarly, the South-East’s Ebube Agu and joint regional outfits in the South-South emerged from the growing public distrust in the federal government’s ability to guarantee safety.

Read Also:

  • Renewed Hope and the Broadening Public Sphere By Ahmed Balarabe Sa’id
  • Army Rescue 17 Kidnap Victims in Kogi State
  • FG to Schools: Get Certified Teachers or Lose WAEC Accreditation

However, the growing wave of self-defence and vigilante initiatives raises ethical, legal, and practical concerns. Nigeria’s Firearms Act prohibits civilians from bearing arms without a licence. Without a clear regulatory framework, arming civilians risks escalating violence, enabling political thuggery, and creating new security threats under the guise of protection.

These dangers are not hypothetical. In Edo State’s Uromi community, vigilantes wrongfully accused 16 Northern hunters of being kidnappers and burned them alive. In July 2022, Ebube Agu operatives reportedly killed 14 unarmed wedding guests in Otulu, Imo State. Other vigilante groups in the region have been implicated in extrajudicial killings and abuses. A Daily Trust investigation in April 2025 revealed that vigilante groups killed at least 68 people in three months, with many more subjected to torture, harassment, or unlawful detention.

These developments have prompted the House of Representatives Committee on Army to call for regulation, oversight, and training of vigilante groups. The Uromi killings, in particular, triggered national outrage and renewed demands for accountability.

Responding to these concerns, Maj. Gen. Chris Olukolade (rtd), Chairman of the Centre for Crisis Communication, acknowledged General Danjuma’s fears but cautioned against unregulated civilian self-defence. He warned that unless communities are engaged within a structured and legal framework, insecurity may only worsen. According to him, civilians should not be armed unless integrated into formal security systems with clear guidelines.

Against this backdrop, community policing has emerged as a more sustainable and coordinated alternative. Under the leadership of the Inspector General of Police, pilot schemes have been launched across several states. These involve recruiting and training locals for surveillance, intelligence gathering, and early intervention, followed by their integration into existing police structures.

Lagos, Ekiti, and Kano States have all recorded notable progress. In Kano, the Hisbah Corps, initially tasked with moral enforcement, has been reoriented to contribute to broader urban security. In Lagos, the Neighbourhood Safety Corps plays a vital role in gathering intelligence and issuing early warnings.

Nonetheless, community policing faces serious limitations. Funding shortfalls, inter-agency rivalries, and a lack of coordination continue to undermine its effectiveness. A major stumbling block is the constitutional contradiction where state governors are designated as Chief Security Officers but lack control over federal police operations within their jurisdictions.

Solving Nigeria’s security crisis requires a comprehensive strategy that addresses institutional, legal, and socio-economic issues. First, the constitution must be amended to empower state and community policing structures with defined jurisdictions and robust oversight. Second, vigilante and self-defence groups must be trained, regulated, and integrated into the formal security architecture to avoid becoming a threat themselves. Third, intelligence gathering should begin at the grassroots, where community members are often the first to notice early warning signs. Fourth, addressing the root causes of insecurity—such as unemployment, poverty, and youth disenfranchisement—through investments in education, job creation, and social empowerment is essential. Lastly, traditional and religious leaders must be given formal roles in mediation, peacebuilding, and community-based conflict resolution, given their influence and trust within local populations.

Nigeria’s security challenges demand more than rhetoric and reactive responses. While the instinct to defend oneself is natural in the face of government failure, unregulated self-defence is a risky and unsustainable path. The lasting solution lies in creating a decentralized, community-driven security model rooted in legality, ethics, and shared responsibility.

As communities across the country face mounting threats, the question is no longer whether to adopt localized security strategies—but how best to coordinate, empower, and regulate them before chaos becomes the norm.

Mukhtar Ya’u Madobi is a Research Fellow at the Centre for Crisis Communication. He can be reached via [email protected].

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
  • Bandits
  • Boko Haram
  • Community Policing
  • dss
  • Insecurity
  • Military
  • North
  • Self Defence
  • Terrorists
  • troops
Previous articleNCoS Refutes Claim of Inmates Being Poorly Fed in Prisons
Next articleArmy  Eliminates Bandit, Recovers Arms in Taraba
Mukhtar Ya'u Madobi
Mukhtar Ya'u Madobi

RELATED ARTICLESMORE FROM AUTHOR

Renewed Hope and the Broadening Public Sphere By Ahmed Balarabe Sa’id

Military Troops in Action

Army Rescue 17 Kidnap Victims in Kogi State

FG to Schools: Get Certified Teachers or Lose WAEC Accreditation

His Royal Highness, the Emir of Ilorin and Chairman, Kwara State Council of Chiefs, Alhaji (Dr) Ibrahim Sulu-Gambari,

Emir of Ilorin, CP Lead Special Prayers Against Insecurity in Kwara

Troops Eliminate Terrorist, Rescue Kidnap Victims in Sokoto, Katsina, Kaduna

ECOWAS debt: Court Remands Ecobank Legal Head over Perjury, defamation of Judge character

FACT-CHECK: Did Governor Uba Sani describe El-Rufai as “Godsent” who assisted him with various needs, including property acquisitions and even against Peter Obi?

The Arrest of Ansaru Kingpins Mahmud Muhammad Usman aka Abu Bara’a, and Mahmud al-Nigeri aka Mallam Mamuda

DSS Secures 15-Year Jail Term for Ansaru Leader Over Illegal Mining

Traffic officials tolling the vehicle at the scene in Abuja

SPECIAL REPORT: Extortion, Blood and Impunity Behind Abuja’s Agbero Menace

MUST READ: Why Everyone Should Use AI for Writing, With Pride Without Shame By Abdulsalam Mahmud

Troops of Nigerian Army after successfully foiling an ambush by Boko Haram/ISWAP Terrorists

Military Kills 6 Terrorists, Lose 3 Soldiers in Zamfara Ambush

Military Troops during operations

Army Arrests Cattle Rustlers, Recover Arms, 164 Stolen Livestock in Plateau, Zamfara, Sokoto

Recent Posts

  • Renewed Hope and the Broadening Public Sphere By Ahmed Balarabe Sa’id
  • Army Rescue 17 Kidnap Victims in Kogi State
  • FG to Schools: Get Certified Teachers or Lose WAEC Accreditation
  • Emir of Ilorin, CP Lead Special Prayers Against Insecurity in Kwara
  • Troops Eliminate Terrorist, Rescue Kidnap Victims in Sokoto, Katsina, Kaduna
  • Home
  • About
  • Adverts
  • Contact
© 2020 PRNigeria. All Rights Reserved.
Latest News
Renewed Hope and the Broadening Public Sphere By Ahmed Balarabe Sa’idArmy Rescue 17 Kidnap Victims in Kogi StateFG to Schools: Get Certified Teachers or Lose WAEC AccreditationEmir of Ilorin, CP Lead Special Prayers Against Insecurity in KwaraTroops Eliminate Terrorist, Rescue Kidnap Victims in Sokoto, Katsina, KadunaECOWAS debt: Court Remands Ecobank Legal Head over Perjury, defamation of Judge characterFACT-CHECK: Did Governor Uba Sani describe El-Rufai as "Godsent" who assisted him with various needs, including property acquisitions and even against Peter Obi?DSS Secures 15-Year Jail Term for Ansaru Leader Over Illegal MiningSPECIAL REPORT: Extortion, Blood and Impunity Behind Abuja's Agbero MenaceMUST READ: Why Everyone Should Use AI for Writing, With Pride Without Shame By Abdulsalam MahmudMilitary Kills 6 Terrorists, Lose 3 Soldiers in Zamfara AmbushArmy Arrests Cattle Rustlers, Recover Arms, 164 Stolen Livestock in Plateau, Zamfara, SokotoFani-Kayode Denies Interest in NFA ChairmanshipDEPOWA: Soldiers’ Wives Trained on Balancing Family, Business, and Personal GrowthTroops, Hybrid Forces Free 17 Bus Passengers Abducted in Kogi
X whatsapp