ARTICLE AD BOX
By Ibrahim Hassan-Wuyo
Brigadier‑General Maharazu Tsiga (retired), former Director‑General of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), has claimed that bandits terrorising communities across Northern Nigeria may be receiving assistance from individuals in positions of authority.
Tsiga made the allegation during a press conference in Kaduna, where he spoke to journalists on behalf of colleagues, friends and associates of the late Major‑General Rabe Abubakar (retired). Abubakar was abducted in Katsina State and later died while in bandit captivity.
The retired general, who himself spent several weeks in captivity after being taken from his hometown in Katsina in February, said his experience among the bandits revealed a vast network of informants, suppliers and collaborators operating outside the forests.
According to Tsiga, these support networks have enabled criminal gangs to sustain their operations despite ongoing military offensives and security measures.
He argued that addressing insecurity requires more than negotiations with armed groups, insisting that authorities must aggressively pursue those involved in supporting banditry.
“It depends on who you are negotiating with and how committed and dedicated we are in making that negotiation,” he said. “I am telling you that no matter what, and no matter the arrangement of negotiation, we are not going to have it easy with these bandits. We must follow them aggressively. We should not forget one thing: these people are human beings like us. They fear death.”
“When we were in captivity, they feared death. They feared anybody who would come and challenge them, fight them and finish them,” he added.
Recounting an experience in captivity, Tsiga described how a suspected supplier contacted a bandit leader early in the morning to discuss the sale of ammunition. “One of the days I was there around 2 a.m., this issue came up. Somebody called and said, ‘Please, Kachala, are you ready to buy 10 cartons of ammunition?’” he recalled.
“He said, ‘Yes, but let me finish with one old man.’ When he finished talking and was talking to me, I asked him jokingly, ‘Put me inside this business now.’” Tsiga recounted.
“He said, ‘Who are you? You are a retired general. You don’t have office. We are talking to people who are in office now,’” the former NYSC boss said.
The comment left him deeply troubled and raised serious concerns about the possible sources of support available to armed groups operating in the region.
He called for a comprehensive strategy that targets not only bandits in the forests but also those providing them with logistics, intelligence, weapons and other forms of assistance.
Tsiga maintained that unless the entire network sustaining banditry is dismantled, efforts to restore lasting peace and security in the North may continue to face significant challenges.
The post Bandits may be getting support from those in authority – Ex‑NYSC DG appeared first on Vanguard News.

1 day ago
4
















English (US) ·