Joseph Bakare
President Muhammadu Buhari has said time is here to teach bandits and their sponsors bitter lesson just as he condemned the latest abduction of Jangebe schoolgirls, as inhumane and totally unacceptable,
He also advised State Governors to stop rewarding bandits or terrorists with ransom payment.
He urged the states “to review their policy of rewarding bandits with money and vehicles, warning that the policy might boomerang disastrously.”
He also advised states and local governments to be more proactive by improving security around schools and their surroundings.
Reacting to the kidnapping of 317 schoolgirls in Government Girls Secondary School, Jangebe in Zamfara State, Buhari said that his administration will not succumb to blackmail by bandits who target innocent school students in the expectations of huge ransom payments.”
“No criminal group can be too strong to be defeated by the government,” he said.
“The only thing standing between our security forces and the bandits are the rules of engagement.”
“We have the capacity to deploy massive force against the bandits in the villages where they operate, but our limitation is the fear of heavy casualties of innocent villagers and hostages who might be used as human shields by the bandits,” he said.
The President said: “our primary objective is to get the hostages safe, alive and unharmed.”
President Buhari noted that “a hostage crisis is a complex situation that requires maximum patience in order to protect the victims from physical harm or even brutal death at the hands of their captors.”
He warned the bandits: “Let them not entertain any illusions that they are more powerful than the government. They shouldn’t mistake our restraint for the humanitarian goals of protecting innocent lives as a weakness or a sign of fear or irresolution.”