

The Nigerian State has failed in its primary responsibility to ensure the security and welfare of the Nigerian people as mandated in section 14 (2) (b) of the Nigerian constitution as amended. More than any other time since the beginning of the Fourth Republic, the last ten years have exposed the disgraceful ineptitude of the Nigerian security apparatus to protect Nigerians all over the country.
2. Rather than protect Nigerians to the utmost degree, the Nigerian State in the last ten years and its political class have validated the prevailing suspicion that the Nigerian people have become mere sitting ducks for the government, terrorists, and violent criminals all over the country.
3. This suspicion was recently validated when the Nigerian Army, under the commandership of the Chief of Army Staff, Taoreed Lagbaja, recklessly killed more than 120 innocent civilians in a peaceful religious gathering in Tudun Biri, Kaduna State. Neither the Chief of Army Staff nor anyone else in the current government of renewed hopelessness has been penalized for the two coordinated airstrikes that reduced humans and people’s homes to ashes.
4. The Nigerian Air Force, during the disastrous regime of General Buhari, killed hundreds of civilians in a similar fashion without the state taking responsibility.
5. In the first quarter of 2023 alone, nearly 2,000 innocent civilians were brutally killed by Islamist terrorists in 34 of the 36 states of Nigeria. The rest of the year followed the same pattern, with a staggering surge in kidnapping activities. Among those murdered were farmers working hard to feed their families and the entire country, as well as autochthons in numerous communities across the country, particularly in the middle belt.
6. Between the inauguration of the incumbent President of Nigeria Bola Tinubu in May 2023 and December 2023, over 5000 Nigerians were viciously slaughtered by Fulani herders and Islamist terrorists across the country. These terrorists have become so bold that they now invade and overrun tens of sleepy villages and communities simultaneously, commit atrocities including the rape of young and elderly women and men, kidnap for ransom or forcible conversion, and leave in their wake a bloody trail of human carnage.
7. On Christmas Eve of 2023, over 150 Christians were savagely slaughtered in Plateau State while thousands were displaced from their homes and ancestral land without any immediate assistance from the security apparatus of the Nigerian State.
8. Likewise, we are barely halfway through the first month of 2024 and Islamist terrorists are already slaughtering Christians and other residents for failing to pay “terror levies” in villages gripped by the reign of terror of these vicious Islamists in the middle belt.
9. Similarly, kidnappers have taken over major highways and cities, including the Federal Capital Territory, ransoming and killing citizens with reckless abandon and forcing the rest of the country to crowdfund for the release of the abducted. Nobody is safe: Christians, Muslims, farmers, ethnic minorities, youth, men, women, and most unfortunately, children.
10. The Minister of Environment, Balarabe Abbas, has spoken on behalf of President Tinubu’s government and publicly confessed to the people’s suspicion that the Nigerian state has relinquished its authority and constitutional mandate to diligently protect the country’s forests and the people living within and around heavily forested areas. By this admission, the Nigerian state is obviously confused and unable to safeguard the lives and properties of ordinary Nigerians.
11. The police-to-population ratio in Nigeria is grossly insufficient at less than 150 police officers for every 100,000 Nigerians, despite the creation of the Special Intervention Squad by the Acting Inspector General of Police in mid-2023.
12. It is, therefore, time to declare a State of Emergency on Insecurity in Nigeria and legalize gun ownership for all persons above 18 years old who are mentally fit to protect themselves, their properties, and their families. Section 33 (2) (a) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 as amended supports the right of Nigerians to defend themselves and their properties.
13. According to statistics from the United Nations, Nigeria is presently home to 70% of over 500 million illegal small arms and light weapons in all of West Africa. In other words, there are more illegal guns than there are actual human beings in the most populous country of Black people on earth, which effectively means that most ordinary Nigerians are practically sitting ducks for Islamist terrorists, Fulani herders, and violent criminals of all kinds in Nigeria.
14. Apart from terrorists and violent criminals, a significant number of these illegal guns are owned and used by celebrities, public servants, and politicians in Nigeria. The immediate ex-chief of Central Bank Godwin Emefiele, for instance, was recently arrested and charged with illegal possession of firearms and ammunition, an offence that currently attracts a minimum sentence of ten years imprisonment.
15. The right to self-defence and protection of property and family must cease to be the preserve of the rich, powerful, and connected in Nigeria. It is time for Nigeria to democratize access to the legal purchase, ownership, and use of firearms and ammunition. Only equal access and opportunity to legally purchase, own, and use firearms and ammunition can save ordinary Nigerians from this violent siege by Islamist terrorists, Fulani herders, and violent criminals. Since the Nigerian state can no longer protect the people, it is time for the people to protect themselves.
SIGNED:
Raphael Adebayo
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