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Nigeria’s defense minister resigns amid security crisis

Mohammed Badaru Abubakar’s resignation comes as Nigeria scrambles to respond to a wave of mass kidnappings.

Nigeria’s defense minister resigns amid security crisis

Mohammed Badaru Abubakar’s resignation comes as Nigeria scrambles to respond to a wave of mass kidnappings.

Nigerian soldiers holding weapons sit at the back of of a pickup
Nigeria’s defense minister has stepped down at a critical time for the country’s armed forces and their fight against Insecurity

Nigeria’s defense minister Mohammed Badaru Abubakar has resigned, the presidency said on Monday, with immediate effect.

Presidential spokesperson Mayo Onanuga said in a statement that Abubakar was quitting on health grounds.

“His resignation comes amid President [Bola] Tinubu’s declaration of a national security emergency, with plans to elaborate on its scope in due course,” the spokesperson said.

Nigeria’s defense minister resigns amid security crisis

Mohammed Badaru Abubakar’s resignation comes as Nigeria scrambles to respond to a wave of mass kidnappings.

Nigeria’s defense minister Mohammed Badaru Abubakar has resigned, the presidency said on Monday, with immediate effect.

Presidential spokesperson Mayo Onanuga said in a statement that Abubakar was quitting on health grounds.

“His resignation comes amid President [Bola] Tinubu’s declaration of a national security emergency, with plans to elaborate on its scope in due course,” the spokesperson said.

Nigeria’s armed banditry is a security crisis
Nigeria has long been plagued by mass kidnappings, but the past weeks have seen a surge in attacks and abductions by armed bandits.

Most recently, gunmen attacked a church in Kogi state in central Nigeria, abducting the pastor along with nearly a dozen worshipers during a Sunday morning service.

On Saturday, some 30 women, including a bride and visiting wedding guests, were kidnapped in Sakoko in northwestern Nigeria.

In all, some 490 people have been abducted across multiple states in the past two weeks, according to Nigeria’s Punch newspaper.

A large number of these were from the St. Mary’s private Catholic boarding school in Papiri, Niger State, where 315 people, mostly children, were abducted in late November. Around 50 children managed to escape.

Armed bandits, often operating in Nigeria’s northwest and north-central regions, frequently carry out kidnappings for ransom.

As well as banditry, Nigeria is also battling a deadly Islamist insurgency in its northwestern regions.

But the Nigerian government has long been criticized for failing to stem the security crisis andprotect schools in particular.

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