From Okwe Obi, Abuja

Pan-Arewa Socio-political Organisation, Northern Elders Forum (NEF) has protested the shutting down of telecommunication masts, schools and markets in the North by state governments as measures to contain insecurity, claiming that the tactics would rather compound the situation.

NEF’s Director of Publicity and Advocacy, Dr. Hakeem Baba-Ahmed, in a statement yesterday, explained that the measure would embolden the bandits when it becomes clear that “governments and security agencies cannot go beyong lockdowns on communities.”

He said the short-term solution represented virtual economic and social lockdowns on people who had been at the mercy of criminals for a long time. He called on the Federal Government to assist states to relieve communities living under additional pressures.

“Northern Elders Forum is closely following the condition of many northern communities that have become particularly vulnerable to attacks and abuse by bandits, kidnappers and related organized criminals.

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“Measures being taken by some state governments such as suspension of weekly markets, restrictions on sale of petrol, closure of schools and some roads, curfews, movement of cattle and plans to restrict communication will compound the desperate conditions of living of many communities in the North.

“While it will be unhelpful to criticize these measures without adequate knowledge of their potentials to relieve the desperation under which people live, it is important nevertheless to demand that those who have powers to impose them also have clear ideas over what they could achieve and when.

“These measures represent virtual economic and social lockdowns on people who had been at the mercy of criminals for a long time.

“Unless they are accompanied by an aggressive and effective assault on the banditry and kidnapping industry, they will merely add to the misery and hopelessness of our communities. Worse, they could further embolden the bandit and the kidnappers when it becomes clear that governments and security agencies cannot go beyong lockdowns on communities.”