NGE condemns incessant abduction of students by bandits

Mustapha Isah

Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE) President, Mustapha Isah

Mustapha Isah

By Benson Michael

The Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE) has condemned the incessant abduction of students by bandits in parts of the country.

The Guild, in a communique issued at the end of its Standing Committee’s meeting in Ikeja, Lagos on Thursday, said it was worried that, the spate of abductions, if not checked, could discourage parents from sending their children to school and thereby lead to a further increase in the number of out-of-school children in Nigeria.

“We strongly believe that children have the right to education and schools should be made safe for them to learn therefore, a comprehensive security plan should be put in place by all levels of government to prevent further abductions of students. Going to school to acquire knowledge is not a crime,” the Guild said in the communique signed by its President, Mustapha Isah and General Secretary, Mary Atolagbe.

In the same vein, the Guild called on the Nigerian government to urgently revisit the Safe School Initiative, with a view to implementing it for the benefit of Nigerian children.

The body of editors believed that dialogue and amnesty for bandits have not been positively impactful and therefore, it should be discouraged.

The Guild aligned with the advice of President Muhammadu Buhari to state governors, to stop giving cash and other materials, such as vehicles to bandits, because such overtures could empower them to carry out more abductions.

The Guild condemned a statement credited to an Islamic scholar, Sheikh Abubakar Gumi, describing journalists as criminals.

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Sheikh Gumi had accused media professionals of adding to insecurity in the country by the names used in describing bandits. He levelled the accusation when he featured on Arise Television station, suggesting that ‘nice’ words should be used to describe bandits, if the nation desired that they surrender.

“Sheikh Gumi and his like minded are hereby reminded that Journalists don’t create events, they merely report them. Also, journalists should not be expected to eulogise a group of people that abducts innocent children and others at will,” it said.

The Guild also denounced the choice of words by some governors who commented on the state of insecurity in the country.

They are reminded that holding a public office comes with enormous responsibilities and that those who did not have solutions to the current security situation should not aggravate it with irresponsible public comments, saying this was no time to play to the gallery.

The Guild called on the government to live up to its fundamental responsibility of securing the lives and property of Nigerians.

“The new Service Chiefs should devise a new strategy to rid the nation’s forests of bandits and other criminal elements,” the communique said.

The Guild also believed that the anti-corruption fight of the Federal Government should be sustained in a credible manner.

“The new Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Abdulrasheed Bawa, should ensure that investigations are well conducted before arrests are made. The practice of arresting suspects, parading them for corruption-related offences and then looking for evidence to nail them should be discarded,” the Guild said.

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