Terrorism remains one of the most serious threats to Nigeria’s peace, security, economic growth, and national unity. The persistent activities of insurgent groups, bandits, kidnappers, and violent extremists have resulted in the tragic loss of lives, widespread displacement of communities, destruction of critical infrastructure, and severely reduced investor confidence. However, a single-track military response can no longer protect our people. Effectively combating terrorism in Nigeria demands a multi-dimensional national security strategy Nigeria can sustain—one that combines urgent law enforcement overhaul, sophisticated intelligence-led counter-terrorism, and economic development.
No single solution can eliminate this existential threat; rather, a coordinated national strategy is required. To rescue the republic, we must look closely at practical, structural recommendations for deep reform.
Combating Terrorism in Nigeria: Decentralisation via a Multiple Policing System
Nigeria’s current centralised policing structure has distinct limitations in responding effectively to local security challenges across its vast territory. To bridge this gap, the federal government must introduce a multiple-policing system tailored to layered threats:
- Federal Police: Responsible for national security, counter-terrorism operations, border security, interstate crimes, and the protection of critical national assets.
- State Police: Responsible for state-level law enforcement, rapid response to local threats, and crime prevention and investigation within states.
- Community Police: Responsible for gathering grassroots intelligence, maintaining close relationships with local communities, and early detection of suspicious activities.
- Specialised Counter-Terrorism Units: Responsible for high-risk operations, hostage rescue missions, and intelligence-led counter-terrorism interventions.
This restructuring guarantees improved response time, better local intelligence, increased accountability, greater community trust, and enhanced security coverage across all geopolitical zones.
Private Security Development: Lessons from South Africa
Nigeria can strengthen public safety through a regulated private security sector modelled in part on the successful framework in South Africa. The state should expand and strengthen the licensing of private security firms and establish strict national standards for recruitment and training.
By allowing private security companies to protect schools, hospitals, farms, industrial facilities, and residential estates, we unlock vital assets. Crucially, the state must create formal intelligence-sharing mechanisms between private security providers and government agencies. This expansion provides additional security manpower, increases surveillance capacity, creates jobs, and reduces pressure on public security agencies.
Implementing Intelligence-Led Counter-Terrorism
Systemic intelligence defeats modern terrorism more effectively than military force alone. True intelligence-led counter-terrorism requires a three-pronged approach:
- Human Intelligence (HUMINT): Recruit local informants, strengthen community engagement, and legally protect whistle-blowers.
- Technical Intelligence: Deploy drone surveillance, satellite monitoring, electronic interception, and artificial intelligence-assisted threat detection.
- Financial Intelligence: Monitor suspicious transactions, track terrorist financing networks, and aggressively freeze assets linked to terrorism.
These measures ensure the prevention of attacks before execution, the rapid identification of terrorist networks, and vastly improved operational efficiency for our forces.
Judicial Reforms and Punishment of Terrorists
Justice must be swift, fair, and effective to serve as a genuine deterrent. The judiciary requires immediate structural intervention:
“Special Terrorism Courts: Dedicated courts should fast-track terrorism cases, reduce prolonged detention without trial, and ensure timely justice.”
Furthermore, the government must introduce robust Witness Protection Programs to safeguard witnesses and informants, ensure confidentiality, and provide relocation when necessary. Assets belonging to terrorists, sponsors, and financiers should be confiscated and redirected toward victim support programs. Convicted terrorists must face long-term imprisonment and the maximum penalties under the law for severe offences.
Prison Administration Lessons from El Salvador
The government of El Salvador has significantly reduced gang violence through aggressive security measures. While the contexts differ, relevant lessons for a national security strategy Nigeria can adopt include strong intelligence gathering, disruption of criminal networks, effective prison administration, swift prosecution of offenders, and highly visible state authority in vulnerable communities.
However, an important consideration remains: any adaptation of such measures in Nigeria must remain consistent with the Constitution of Nigeria, the rule of law, human rights protections, and judicial oversight. We must perfectly balance security effectiveness and civil liberties.
Strengthening Defences and Border Security
Nigeria’s extensive borders present significant security challenges that feed insurgencies. We must immediately combine technology deployment—including border surveillance cameras, drones, motion sensors, and biometric systems—with enhanced border patrols that increase personnel, equipment, and mobility.
Simultaneously, regional cooperation is non-negotiable. Nigeria must strengthen partnerships with Niger, Chad, Cameroon, and Benin to combat cross-border terrorism and arms trafficking.
Revival of Traditional Nigerian Security Systems
Before modern policing, Nigerian communities successfully maintained order through indigenous institutions. Traditional systems should complement—not replace—formal security institutions.
Traditional rulers can serve as vital intelligence partners, mediate local conflicts, and identify emerging threats early. Properly regulated community vigilance groups can support law enforcement, monitor rural areas, and provide early warning alerts. Finally, village security committees can monitor suspicious movements and facilitate communication with security agencies, using indigenous conflict resolution to reduce tensions before they escalate into violence.
Education, Employment, and Counter-Radicalisation
Security measures alone cannot eliminate the root causes of radicalisation. The government should improve access to quality education, expand technical and vocational training, and actively promote civic responsibility.
To blunt the appeal of extremist groups, youth employment programs must focus heavily on entrepreneurship, skills acquisition, agriculture, technology, and innovation. Alongside these economic drivers, deep religious and community engagement is required; religious leaders should actively promote peace, counter extremist narratives, and encourage national unity.
Technology and Modern Security Capabilities
Nigeria must embrace modern security technologies to outpace evolving threats. Drone technology must be prioritised for surveillance, reconnaissance, and rapid response, while artificial intelligence can drive predictive security analysis, facial recognition, and pattern detection.
National Security Database Integration:
- Criminal Records & Biometrics
- Immigration & Border Data
- Live Intelligence Reports
We must integrate criminal records, biometric information, immigration data, and intelligence reports into a single database while strengthening cybersecurity against online radicalisation, terrorist communications, and cyber-attacks.
National Unity and Good Governance
Long-term security depends entirely on citizens having confidence in government institutions. The state must promote justice, transparency, accountability, inclusive governance, and equal economic opportunities. When citizens feel protected, represented, and included, extremist recruitment becomes significantly more difficult.
Conclusion
Military action alone cannot defeat terrorism in Nigeria. Sustainable victory requires a comprehensive national strategy that integrates a multiple policing system, intelligence-led counter-terrorism, a regulated private security sector, judicial reforms, strengthened border security, traditional community-based security structures, technological innovation, and socio-economic development.
Nigeria possesses the human, institutional, and cultural resources necessary to overcome terrorism. With strong political will, effective leadership, community participation, and respect for the rule of law, the nation can significantly reduce terrorism and build a safer, more prosperous future for all citizens.