Middle East & Africa | Insecurity in Nigeria

Kidnappers are wreaking havoc in Nigeria

Yet President Tinubu’s security plan is worryingly like his predecessor’s

A Nigerian policeman at the Idu Railway Station
Photograph: Getty Images
|Abuja

How much politicians in Nigeria care about national insecurity has long been correlated with how close it gets to their mansions in Abuja, the capital. On its outskirts on January 2nd a father and his six daughters were kidnapped, prompting a rare outcry on high. A crowdfunding effort to pay the ransom was even backed by a former minister. But the kidnappers instead killed one of the girls and demanded more cash. The wife of President Bola Tinubu publicly lamented a “devastating loss”. Yet such horrors are still appallingly frequent—and largely ignored by politicians. In one incident last week in the south-east 45 people were kidnapped and are still missing, yet few leaders spoke out.

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This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline “Abductions and killings persist”

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