A former vice president of Nigeria, Atiku Abubakar, has decried the increasing wave of abduction and killing of students by bandits across the country.
Atiku, who was the presidential candidate of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) in the 2019 general election, spoke against the backdrop of the abduction of students of the Federal University of Agriculture, Makurdi, Benue State, on Sunday, which he described as “one abduction too many”.
“The abduction of yet an unspecific number of undergraduates of the Federal University of Agriculture, Makurdi, Benue State, is one abduction too many,” Atiku said in a statement he personally signed, a copy of which was made available to BusinessDay.
“It marks both an unacceptable escalation and an expansion of this menace, and we must not only ensure that the abducted youths are rescued, but even more importantly, we must put in measures to prevent future reoccurrences,” he said.
He urged the Federal Government and relevant security agencies not to allow such negative developments to become a trend.
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“This must not be allowed to become our new normal. It is time for us as a nation to face the reality that we have an emergency on our hands. A catastrophe that must be decisively dealt with before it snowballs into an existential crisis,” the former vice president said.
“We must stop treating these acts of criminality with kid gloves. Enough is enough! There must be safety of lives and property in our citadels of learning, because without it, there would be loss of confidence in the sector, which will result in low enrolment rates in a country that is amongst the highest statistically for out-of-school children,” he said.
Alluding to his past pieces of advice on security issues in the country, he said it was all the more reason he had maintained in the past that impunity must give way to punitive measures.
“When criminals profit from their criminality, crime will increase. The only response from all governments in Nigeria, to acts of abduction, kidnapping and unlawful detention of persons, ought to be to bring the full weight of the law on the perpetrators of these heinous crimes.
“Once these criminals have clarity on what awaits them should they toe such evil paths, then their audacity to commit evil will be weakened, and gradually, this ugly chapter in our national life will become a thing of the past,” he said.
He renewed the call he made on Monday, March 15, 2021, “for a state of emergency to be declared on the education sector, and for 24-hour armed guards to be posted at all schools in the affected states”.
“Yes, it is an expensive venture. Nevertheless, we must accept that whatever we invest in preserving the lives of Nigeria’s youth is worth the price, as nothing is, or can be more valuable to us than our youths, who will take up the baton after we are gone,” he said.


