Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Nurse Habila’s Father Petitions IGP, Demands Release Of Daughter’s Remains For Burial
    • EXCLUSIVE: El-Rufai Apologises To Court, Withdraws Three Applications
    • Investors At UBA Business Series Identify Africa’s Next Billion-Dollar Opportunities
    • Court Reserves Judgment In Suit Challenging Pantami’s Emergence As Gombe PDP Candidate
    • Security Operatives Rescue Abducted Kogi Students, Principal, NECO Official
    • Court Orders Gombe Government To Vacate Disputed Land, Pay ₦65m Damages
    • Kano Lawyer Defeats FRSC As Court Bars Officials From Operating On State, LG Roads
    • Neptune Prime Unveils Institute Of Journalism, Begins Sale Of Application Forms
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    NEWS POINT NIGERIANEWS POINT NIGERIA
    • HOME
    • NEWS

      Nurse Habila’s Father Petitions IGP, Demands Release Of Daughter’s Remains For Burial

      July 17, 2026

      EXCLUSIVE: El-Rufai Apologises To Court, Withdraws Three Applications

      July 17, 2026

      Investors At UBA Business Series Identify Africa’s Next Billion-Dollar Opportunities

      July 17, 2026

      Court Reserves Judgment In Suit Challenging Pantami’s Emergence As Gombe PDP Candidate

      July 17, 2026

      Security Operatives Rescue Abducted Kogi Students, Principal, NECO Official

      July 17, 2026
    • COLUMN

      Shettima’s Final Test – By Azu Ishiekwene

      July 17, 2026

      Textbook Rankings Put Future Of Publishing And Learning At Risk – By Zainab Suleiman Okino

      July 16, 2026

      Who Teaches A Girl To Be A Woman – By Boma West

      July 15, 2026

      Of Banditry And A Shared Sovereignty (2) – By Dr Hassan Gimba

      July 13, 2026

      The Battle Before The 2027 Ballots – By Dr Dakuku Peterside

      July 13, 2026
    • EDUCATION

      FG Names Prof. Adamu Acting Vice-Chancellor To Steer UniAbuja For Three Months

      August 9, 2025

      13 Countries Offering Free Or Low-Cost PhD Programmes For Non-Citizens

      January 25, 2025

      NECO: Abia, Imo Top Performing States In Two Years, Katsina, Zamfara Come Last

      October 3, 2024

      NBTE Accredits 17 Programmes At Federal Polytechnic Kabo

      August 20, 2024

      15 Most Expensive Universities In Nigeria

      May 19, 2024
    • INTERNATIONAL

      Iran Condemns ‘Barbaric’ US Attack Near Children’s Cancer Hospital

      July 17, 2026

      Venezuela Earthquake: Number Of Known Dead Rises To Nearly 5,000 Victims

      July 17, 2026

      US Hits Iranian Oil Tanker In Hormuz, Tehran Retaliates, Attacks Kuwait, Jordan

      July 16, 2026

      Over 500 Feared Dead In Two Suspected Shipwrecks Off Myanmar

      July 16, 2026

      Israel Attacks Children, Hospitals In bloody Week In Gaza

      July 15, 2026
    • JUDICIARY

      FULL LIST: Judicial Council Recommends Appointment Of 11 Supreme Court Justices

      December 6, 2023

      Supreme Court: Judicial Council Screens 22 Nominees, Candidates Face DSS, Others

      November 29, 2023

      FULL LIST: Judicial Commission Nominates 22 Justices For Elevation To Supreme Court

      November 16, 2023

      Seven Key Issues Resolved By Seven Supreme Court Judges

      October 26, 2023

      FULL LIST: CJN To Swear In Falana’s Wife, 57 Others As SANs November 27

      October 12, 2023
    • POLITICS

      Tuggar Vs Pate: Two Ministers, One Seat, And A Defining Political Test For Bauchi 2027

      March 22, 2026

      ADC Leadership Crisis Deepens As Bala Writes INEC To Sack David Mark, Aregbesola

      March 22, 2026

      What Peter Obi May Lose If He Joins Coalition As VP Candidate

      May 25, 2025

      Atiku Moves To Unseat Wike’s Damagum As PDP Chairman, Backs Suswam As Replacement

      April 15, 2024

      Edo’s Senator Matthew Uroghide, Others Defect To APC

      April 13, 2024
    • SPORTS

      Bago Appoints New Management Committee For Niger Tornadoes Football Club

      July 17, 2026

      Champions Super Falcons Gear Up For WAFCON, Schedule Friendly Against Ghana

      July 15, 2026

      Man United Complete £48m Signing Of Chelsea’s Santos, Close In On Villa’s Tielemans

      July 14, 2026

      ‘The Boys Are Ready To Do Everything For Him’, Moses Simon Backs Chelle To Stay

      July 14, 2026

      Senegal Sack Coach Pape Thiaw After Dramatic World Cup Exit

      July 13, 2026
    • MORE
      • AFRICA
      • ANALYSIS
      • BUSINESS
      • ENTERTAINMENT
      • FEATURED
      • LENS SPEAK
      • INFO – TECH
      • INTERVIEW
      • NIGERIA DECIDES
      • OPINION
      • Personality Profile
      • Picture of the month
      • Science
      • Special Project
      • Videos
      • Weekend Sports
    NEWS POINT NIGERIANEWS POINT NIGERIA
    Home - Fear And Fragility: How Safe Are Nigerians? – By Dr Dakuku Peterside

    Fear And Fragility: How Safe Are Nigerians? – By Dr Dakuku Peterside

    By Dakuku PetersideJune 30, 2025
    Dakuku Column 2

    WHEN dawn cracks open the Nigerian sky these days, the first breath many people take is heavy with questions that shouldn’t linger in a country as rich in potential as Nigeria. It used to be enough to worry about food on the table or the children’s school fees, but now an even more primal fear sits beside those old burdens: “Am I safe enough to see tomorrow?”

    NEW UBA

    Once upon a time, these worries were spoken in hushed tones only in the northeast, in places where Boko Haram and ISWAP turned towns into ghost settlements and farms into mass graves. But now, fear has found new postcodes, new voices, and new victims. From wedding convoys ambushed on the road in Plateau to explosions rocking markets in Kano, from gun battles in Kaduna’s streets to soldiers ambushed in Niger State, the message is clear: the fear of sudden violence is no longer distant. It has become the air we breathe.

    NNAMDI

    Just in the last fortnight, a series of chilling incidents cut through every illusion that anywhere in Nigeria is truly safe. Benue is already a story of a killing field. Thirty-one travellers going from Kaduna to a wedding in Plateau were attacked on the road; twelve didn’t make it back alive, and the rest are scarred by a memory they will carry to their graves.

    Ad 19
    Ad 20

    In Borno’s Kobduga village, mourners gathered to bury loved ones only to be ripped apart by suicide bombers—over thirty dead in a single, devastating heartbeat. Kano, a city known for its industriousness and commerce, shuddered when a deadly explosion in Sabon Gari killed nine people and injured dozens more, a blast rumoured to be linked to illegal storage of explosives but symbolising something bigger: that even the places where business booms are just a spark away from tragedy. In Barnawa, Kaduna, people cowered behind locked doors as police exchanged fire with armed robbers in a broad daylight shootout that left the air thick with the smell of gunpowder. Niger State saw its horror when soldiers manning a checkpoint near Kontagora were ambushed and killed, their weapons stolen — evidence that the guardians themselves have become targets.

    These tragedies are not isolated dots on a tragic map; they form a pattern that millions of Nigerians have come to accept as the new normal. And that is where the real danger lies: when fear becomes familiar, hopelessness creeps in. But while the bullets and bombs make headlines, there is a quieter violence that maims just as deeply — the violence of economic insecurity. It sits at the market stall where a mother must decide what to buy when the naira in her purse has lost its worth overnight. It waits in the empty fields in Zamfara and Katsina, where farmers have fled because to tend crops is now to risk being kidnapped or killed. When you stitch these numbers together, you see a nation not just wounded but drifting on a tide of fear and uncertainty.

    It’s not only Nigerians who see this. A recent global survey by a Singaporean firm looked at 180 countries through the lens of safety and well-being. It measured nine key areas: personal safety, quality of life, cost of living, global peace, purchasing power, healthcare, property affordability, commute times, and employment rates. Nigeria didn’t make the top 100 places where citizens feel safe — neither physically nor financially.

    Our Quality-of-Life Index dropped from 5th to 6th in Africa in 2025, primarily due to a combination of runaway inflation, deteriorating infrastructure, and persistently high unemployment rates. The Global Peace Index ranks us 146th out of 163 countries. On healthcare, we lag embarrassingly far behind with fewer than 0.4 doctors for every thousand people, while the global average stands at 1.6. Meanwhile, our Purchasing Power Index continues to decline as the naira loses value and prices spiral upward.

    Against that backdrop, President Tinubu took the rostrum of the National Assembly on Democracy Day and declared, “National security is the foundation of peace and progress. We have intensified security operations to reclaim communities from criminals and terrorists… our highways are safer, and we invest in technology and training to secure every inch of this country.”

    His government’s numbers are indeed impressive: ₦6.11 trillion—the most significant defence allocation in Nigerian history—was allocated from the record ₦54.99 trillion budget for 2025. He has initiated discussions on constitutional amendments for state policing and signalled his readiness to move policing to the Concurrent List.

    Nigerian TAX Reform - Federal Goverment

    Yet the gulf between appropriation and outcome is measured in graves, not spreadsheets. Within a week of the Democracy Day address, a suicide bomber blew apart market-goers in Konduga; within days, a mortar shell tore through a Kano factory; within hours of new “precision strikes” in Niger State, fourteen soldiers lay dead. Critics ask why, after two supplementary defence budgets and a raft of new commanders, bandits still dictate farming cycles, and kidnapping cartels still fix ransom prices.

    The AP’s report on the Benue massacre notes that Tinubu’s visit came days late and yielded no immediate arrests, fuelling accusations of a “react-don’t-prevent” doctrine. The bigger structural reforms—professionalised local policing, swift judicial processes, socio-economic buffers—remain promises in committee rooms while communities improvise barricades.

    So, when people ask, “Are Nigerians safe?” the honest answer is that many aren’t — not from the gunman on the highway nor the slow violence of poverty that drains hope from the bones. This is why the core argument must ring loud: our leaders — local, state, and federal — must finally grasp that security is not just soldiers at checkpoints or more guns in the hands of the police. Security must be understood in all its dimensions. Economic insecurity is as dangerous as physical insecurity. A hungry nation will never be a peaceful nation; a country where 50% of youth are unemployed or underemployed is not a country that can sleep with both eyes closed.

    National Orientation Agency Page UP
    National Orientation Agency - Down

    National security underpins everything: peace, stability, the welfare of the people, the unity of the republic, and the sovereignty that many cherish on Independence Day. Without a sense of safety — that you can farm your land, run your shop, send your kids to school and expect them to come home — all talk of national pride becomes empty theatre. A strong economy is the very spine that holds up the shield of defence. If a country is to stand resilient against disruptions — from terror to inflation to pandemics — it must have the means to defend its people’s livelihoods as well as their lives.

    The broader consequences of ignoring this truth are already visible: investors pack their bags, youth find new homes across oceans, communities fracture into suspicion and blame, and the dream of unity becomes a political slogan rather than a lived reality. Families are displaced by violence and driven deeper into poverty. Social trust erodes when people see criminals roam free and the powerful escape consequences. Insecurity, whether it wears camouflage or a suit, flourishes when the state cannot deliver on its most basic promise: that people should live and work in peace and contentment.

    So, what should we do with this grim reflection? We can’t continue with ritual condemnations that dry up in press conferences. We must build a new understanding that security is a basket with many eggs: reforming security forces to protect, not exploit; investing in local intelligence and community policing so trust replaces fear; taming inflation with policies that don’t just favour the elite; reviving the economy by fixing roads, energising power supply, supporting farmers, and encouraging industries to absorb our restless youth.

    We need a healthcare system that works, schools that stay open and deliver real learning, and courts that convict criminals, regardless of their connections. Defence spending must be matched by transparent audits and a parallel surge in humanitarian and reconstruction funds, particularly for the farms and schools that violence has emptied. And the social compact must be rebuilt. Citizens who trust that the government will protect their pockets are likelier to share intelligence that protects their neighbours’ lives.

    This is not a one-person job. It is a task that calls on every Nigerian — leaders who must put self-interest aside, security agencies who must prioritise human rights, civil society who must continue pushing for accountability, and citizens who must hold those in power to their promises. Only then can we break this cycle where every dawn begins with the same whispered question, “Am I safe today?”

    We must create a Nigeria where that question fades —replaced by the certainty that whether you are a farmer in Zamfara, a student in Maiduguri, a trader in Kano, a nurse in Kaduna, a trader in Onitsha, or a civil servant in Abeokuta, you can live, work and hope without fear. Safety must become more than a privilege for the few; it must be a birthright for all. Until we get there, we will continue to count the bodies, bury the dreams, and wonder what it will take to turn this fragile state of safety into something more substantial, something real, something truly Nigerian.

    • Peterside, PhD, is a public sector turnaround expert, public policy analyst and leadership coach, and is the author of the forthcoming book, “Leading in a Storm”, a book on crisis leadership.

    Dakuku Peterside Column Safety Security
    Share. Facebook Twitter WhatsApp LinkedIn Telegram Email

    Related Posts

    Shettima’s Final Test – By Azu Ishiekwene

    July 17, 2026

    Textbook Rankings Put Future Of Publishing And Learning At Risk – By Zainab Suleiman Okino

    July 16, 2026

    Who Teaches A Girl To Be A Woman – By Boma West

    July 15, 2026

    Of Banditry And A Shared Sovereignty (2) – By Dr Hassan Gimba

    July 13, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Latest Posts

    Nurse Habila’s Father Petitions IGP, Demands Release Of Daughter’s Remains For Burial

    July 17, 2026

    EXCLUSIVE: El-Rufai Apologises To Court, Withdraws Three Applications

    July 17, 2026

    Investors At UBA Business Series Identify Africa’s Next Billion-Dollar Opportunities

    July 17, 2026

    Court Reserves Judgment In Suit Challenging Pantami’s Emergence As Gombe PDP Candidate

    July 17, 2026

    Security Operatives Rescue Abducted Kogi Students, Principal, NECO Official

    July 17, 2026
    Advertisement
    News Point NG
    © 2026 NEWS POINT NIGERIA Developed by ENGRMKS & CO.
    • Home
    • About us
    • Disclaimer
    • Our Advert Rates
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Join Us On WhatsApp