Saturday, May 3, 2025

Experts advise Niger-governor-elect to introduce community violence reduction strategy

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Rayyan Alhassan
Rayyan Alhassanhttps://dailynigerian.com/author/rayyan/
Rayyan Alhassan is a graduate of Journalism and Mass Communication at Sikkim Manipal University, Ghana. He is the acting Managing Editor at the Daily Nigerian newspaper, a position he has held for the past 3 years. He can be reached via rayyanalhassan@dailynigerian.com, or www.facebook.com/RayyanAlhassan, or @Rayyan88 on Twitter.
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Ahead of his inauguration on May 29, the Niger State governor-elect, Umar Bago, has been advised on the introduction of a community violence reduction strategy to curb youth restiveness in the state.

In recent years, the state has been a hotbed of violence perpetrated by minors and youth who are known as yan-daba.

Appearing on a sensitisation session aired on 91.3 Stereo FM, experts and stakeholders said the strategy would restore peace and order to the city and reform the perpetrators.

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The programme featured Maurice Magaji, Coordinator, Bago Economic Think-tank; Apostle Solomon K. Favour, Niger State Director, Politics and Governance for Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria; and Galadima A. Bala Katcha, a Senior Lecture at IBB University, Lapai.

Others are Umar M.K. Garba, Secretary, Minna Central Mosque; and Dantani Mohammed Salau, Chairman, Minna Metro Command of the Police Community Relations Committee, PCRC.

According to the experts, the strategy is modeled after the United Nations’ Integrated Disarmament, Demobilsation and Reintegration, DDR, concept which directly contributes to the achievement of Sustainable Development Goal, SDG, 16.1.

On his part, Mr Salau attributed the violence youth are perpetrating in Minna to, first, “the weakness of our laws.

“Secondly, the compromise between those who matter in coordinating activities of youth from parental level to the social welfare level; to the government itself not having a policy that will reduce the aggression in that age of youth.

“If you look at Minna, immediately after 2019 elections, kids that are of school age, maybe JSS 1 or 2; some of them because of the way they are being used politically, they see schooling as a burden.

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Mr Katcha said: “First of all, I am aligning with the saying, ‘an idle mind is a devil’s workshop’. The restiveness is not only restricted to Minna. It is happening in almost every part of Niger state.

“There are a lot of youthful energies that are not being harnessed in the right way.  That is why I brought up the idea of ‘an idle man is a devil’s workshop’.

“Niger is a civil service state; there is no much creativity or innovation to harness the rampant youthful energies we have. That is why it is easy to recruit or initiate youth restiveness and commit crimes.

“Many of the youth are jobless and nothing is being done about it. Many of them are of the view that politics is about hooliganism, thuggery and others.

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“These are part of the problem. We don’t channel the youthful energy the right way in the state. We must begin to make them innovative and inventive by putting the the necessary tools in place.”

The scholar added that, “Many people have to be involved. Every government must have two ways of tackling youth restiveness. First is by applying ideaological state apparatus and the second one is by applying institutional state apparatus.

“The first one is that all the big people involved in moulding the ideology of a child like the church, the mosque, the school, the teachers, etc. all these people have to orient the child under their wings.

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“Government has to empower the National Orientation Agency to carry out orientations in the society. And then where all these fail, the institutional state apparatus must come in. This is where the institutions like the police, the military, etc. have to come in.

“However, parents have the highest level of responsibility to resolve the problem. We also need to go back to the way things were: the community used to be the owner of a child, but today people personalize children. It is wrong; one person cannot train a child. Even two children cannot train a child. It takes the community to train a child.”

On his part, Mr Magaji attributed the problem to the erosion of family values and the implementation of government policies, saying, “It has a lot to do with family values. It has a lot to do with government policies and their implementation.

“Before 2019, thuggery existed but it was not as much as it is now. However, we forget the fact that we have had a lot of violence in our neighbouring states which has brought about the influx of people into our state.”

He said he was certainly optimistic that the incoming administration will put in place programmes and policies that will give everybody in the state a sense of belonging.

For Mr Favour, “the youth have been exposed to money at tender age.  Some of our politicians exposed them to money and each time they don’t have money in their pockets, they look for ways to acquire money, and their way of making money is through perpetration of violence.

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“In most cases, they create an atmosphere of violence because they want to loot people’s belongings. And when you look at it all, it boils down to lack of jobs. In the Christian side of it, the Holy Book says, “the glory of the youth is their strength”.

“They have so much strength and if the strength is not being channeled properly, it will be used wrongly. if they have jobs, I believe they will not engage in it.

“I want to however suggest that any child caught hawking during school hours, the parents should be arrested to explain why the child is not in school. This is because education will go a long way in curbing the problem.”

According to Garba, “I believe the cause is lack of proper training by the parents. If we say it is because they don’t have jobs to do; that is not true completely. In Minna today, there are many workshops where you can go and learn a trade.

“Some of us were sent to the workshops to learn skills and we are doing well now. If the parents can properly train their kids right from childhood, things wouldn’t be the way they are.”

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