In the middle of
February 2025, the Alumni Association of the National Institute of Security
Studies (AANISS) held its maiden annual lecture in Abuja. On that occasion, the
Director General, Department of State Services (DG, DSS), Mr. Adeola Ajayi
showcased the comedian in him when he cracked not a few ribs. Many mouths were
left ajar that a man sitting on such a hot seat could humour his guests that
much.
Ajayi had told the
Chief of Defence Staff, General Christopher Musa, chairman of the occasion,
that the decision of the Canadian government to deny him and some military
officers visa to enable them to attend a sporting event in Vancouver, was due
to the covert operations of the secret service. He said that General Musa
“underrated” the DSS and was made to pay for his “crime.”
Ajayi had said:
“As much as I like General Musa, he underrated me. I have spent 35 years in
this job, but for political appointments, I should be on my way out by April…
and all I’ve learnt is covertness, how to do things covertly. General Musa, you
made a mistake with me.”
He said that the
service was shocked that after Musa had agreed to chair the event, he started
processing a Canadian visa. “So, we covertly made sure we denied you. So, my
dear General, next time when you hear of DSS, and under a leadership like mine,
who has swag on the job, don’t underrate us, when you leave here, you can see
me, you get your Canadian visa. We wanted you to be here so you couldn’t have
been in Vancouver.”
After succeeding
in cracking the ribs of his guests, the DG went on to proffer some solutions to
what is fast becoming the intractable insurgency challenge in the country. I am
even surprised that weeks after his submission, the national and sub-national
governments are not thinking of how to adopt his position as policy directions
to tackle insurgency in the land.
According to
Ajayi, there is the need to make Nigerian citizens the first layer of defence
against attacks by bandits and insurgents, because there is no way a security
agency would muster the resources to guard every inch of a nation’s land mass.
He related his experience while serving as Bauchi State Director of the service
to back up his submissions on what he called the practical approach towards
curbing terrorism.
According to him,
the story of Azare community in Bauchi State and Tafawa Balewa, another area of
the same state, provides clear examples on the way to go in tackling the menace
of insurgency and banditry.
Hear the DG:
“Speaking seriously about the practical approach to mobilizing to curb
insecurity, I will share experience with you when I was state director in
Bauchi. Most of you would remember an incident in Azare. A group of terrorists,
Boko Haram, had invaded Azare. They were shooting in an attempt to kidnap, and
the community chased them. They killed some members of the community, but the
community members killed all of them. The last guy, Khalid, climbed a tree and
was firing. The community stood. They were resilient, and they killed Khalid.
“Since that day, there has not been one
terrorist attack on Azare. As a matter of fact, the former head of state,
General Ibrahim Babangida, said, ‘if we want to stop or curb this terrorism, we
should emulate the Azare example", he said.
Tafawa Balewa was
also a community that used to be in flames in Bauchi. And the people of Bogoro
and some parts of Tafawa Balewa, where the Sayawas are, know their terrains
better, climbed on trees and mountains and when the invaders came, they did not
only repel them, they seized their weapons and since then you can attest to it
that you hardly hear about Tafawa Balewa again.
“What I am trying
to say, the practical approach to mobilizing people is that you have to get
everyone involved. You did not expect the Nigerian Army, Police, or DSS to
protect every Nigerian or every community. It is not going to work. In the US,
if you visit someone in the house, you will be shocked that when the guy hears
a police siren, he will just pull his drawer, pull out his gun, and keep it.
So, one of my hosts did that and I asked him, ‘why did you do that, and he
said, if they are chasing someone, and he enters my house, I will shoot him
first’. And that is the layer we have to start thinking about. How can we
create the first layer of defence.
The military,
police and all the security agencies are to deal with the bigger one. The
organised ones. But it is impossible for us to deploy to every community in the
country. It is unimaginable that any security agency has resources to do that.”
The DG further
told his listeners that as they leave the venue of the lecture, they should go
with the readiness to create the first line of defence in the communities, such
that the people would be prepared to act as the “first line of defence.”
In a rhetorical
tone, he asked what our culture is and answered by saying that our culture is
communal. “We have ceremonies together. Festivals together, wedding ceremonies
together. So why can’t we fight some miscreants, some charlatans among us
together.” He submitted that a community should say that terrorists cannot come
near it.
“That is what Tafawa Balewa had done. If you
go to that community to attack them, you will be sorry for yourself…"
The DG hit the
nail on the head when he frankly submitted that the system must allow a level
of armament among our communities to ensure that they are able to act as the
true first line of defence. He said: “We have to allow some level of armament
for the communities, and they can serve as first line of defence.” He added
that the elite in the society should be able to influence how communities
secure some approvals that would ensure that the people can act as the first
line of defence.
He further
submitted: “You can imagine, one community, call it Sector Four, or whatever,
call the Army that they were attacking the community. Before they (the Army)
get there, they (the miscreants) have attacked another community. That security
starts from you.”
He told the
audience that as long as human beings exist, there would always be insecurity
and that the world had seen different layers of crime, including revolutions,
plane hijacks, and so on. “People say there is security problem in Nigeria. As
long as human beings exist, there would always be security problems,” he
stated. He added: “We have to take that
mentality away. What are the security agencies doing? Who apart from a tree
knows that they want to come and cut him and would remain standing. Only a tree.
We have to get the communities to rise and defend themselves first, and the
time to start it is now!”
I don’t know
whether we should commend Mr. Ajayi for breaking the stereotypical chain of
security officers in the country who talk tongue-in-cheek on such matters. We
must just commend him for telling the truth as it is. This must be one of the
rare occasions we hear an officer of state speak to the issue of insecurity the
way it should be. But besides hearing him tell the truth, governments at all
levels must make something out of what he had said. If we cannot license all
Nigerians who wish to own a gun, we should be able to license vigilante groups
and community security outfits to defend the people and prevent cheap, untimely
deaths.
Many Nigerians
have clamoured for gun licensing in the country, but the official position has
always been laming and unhelpful. ‘Oh! It will lead to an escalation in gun
crime and violence’! ‘It will lead to many untimely deaths and so forth’. But
the flip side of that argument is always avoided. If a criminal knows that he
is going to encounter resistance in an area of operation, he will think twice.
It is a pity we already have the examples of Azare and Tafawa Balewa in this
country, yet we hear of bandits and their midnight raids on communities
becoming commonplace.
Just recently, the
same chilling and nauseating stories rented the hear in Ondo State when some 40
persons were mowed down by terrorists in a midnight raid on four
communities. Reports indicated that the
affected villages in Akure North Local Government Area include Aba Alajido, Aba
Sunday, Aba Pastor, and Ademekun, were invaded by gunmen at night, leaving many
dead and several fleeing their abodes.
Hear a resident:
“They attacked our communities on Friday night when everyone was asleep. They
opened fire at everyone in sight. So many ran to the bush for safety while some
unlucky ones were killed in the villages. I am sure that over 40 people have been
killed while many have sustained injuries.”
I think the launch
of this sort of attack on Ondo soil should not only send clear signals to
Governor Lucky Aiyedatiwa and his cabinet that: Ise wa fun won lati se; even
though that’s a line from another states’ anthem, but it should also tell the
Ondo State chapter of Amotekun its time to double its efforts. Accounts of the
victims looked exactly like the ones we heard from Plateau, Benue, and the
insurgency-ravaged areas. When we are not at war, why would anyone launch an
attack on a people who were peacefully enjoying their rest after a day’s hard
work? What is the essence of that
attack, particularly when slavery and slave trade-the driving force behind such
raids in centuries past are no longer in practice.
Whether it is
Ondo, Zamfara, Katsina, or Borno, attacks by bandits and insurgents must be
terminated, and like the DG DSS said, the time to do that is Now!
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