The rising number of kidnappings for ransom that have recently threatened the capital city and the rest of the country’s conflict-hit north has the Nigerian leader announcing on Tuesday that his administration will begin a “massive education” campaign among the young of the country as a means to combat this problem.
Last year, the West African nation’s security crisis was a campaign promise of President Bola Tinubu, who won the election. The city of Abuja has seen an uptick in kidnappings along main routes and in residences in the past few weeks, but brutal assaults, especially in the north, have continued.
Tinubu slammed the kidnappings as “disturbing, ungodly and sinister” and praised education as “the antidote to the troubles agitating the nation,” as stated by presidential spokesman Ajuri Ngelale.
“Learning is the most potent weapon against poverty,” the declaration declared. “Security agencies are acting with dispatch to immediately address the current challenge (while) all required resources, policies and plans will be rolled out soon for the massive education of Nigerian youths.”