Forgotten Dairies
Insecurity In Nigeria: Causes, Effects And Solutions -By Solomon Testimony Emorere
The effects on national development are severe and measurable. Farming output has dropped in several food-producing states, contributing to inflation and food insecurity. Foreign direct investment continues to decline in sectors that require movement of goods and personnel. Social trust between ethnic and religious groups is eroding as communities blame each other for attacks. Humanitarian needs are rising, with millions displaced and children out of school.
Insecurity in Nigeria in 2026 remains the single biggest threat to national development, public trust, and everyday life. What began years ago as isolated insurgent attacks in the North East has mutated into a nationwide crisis of banditry, mass kidnapping, terrorism, armed robbery, cultism, and urban violence. The result is simple and brutal. Millions of Nigerians now live in fear, rural economies are collapsing, schools are shutting down, and investors are walking away. Military operations have slowed some groups, but they have not restored safety. The reason is clear. Insecurity in Nigeria persists because military force has not been matched with governance reform, economic opportunity, and credible intelligence, leaving poverty and weak institutions to keep feeding the violence.
In the North East, Boko Haram and Islamic State West Africa Province remain active despite years of sustained military pressure. Their attacks continue to target villages and highways where security presence is thin. Entire communities have been displaced, and thousands remain in internally displaced persons camps with little hope of return. Farming, which is the economic backbone of the region, has collapsed in many local government areas because farmers are either killed, taxed by armed groups, or too afraid to enter their fields. The consequence is not just hunger in Borno or Yobe. It is food inflation in Lagos and Abuja, because the food supply chain starts on farms that are no longer safe.
The crisis is no longer confined to the North East. In the North West and parts of North Central, banditry has become an organized economy. Armed groups operate from forest corridors across Zamfara, Kaduna, Niger, and Katsina, raiding villages, burning markets, and abducting residents for ransom. What makes the situation worse is the scale and sophistication. These groups now control territory, collect taxes, and access military-grade weapons. Kidnapping of schoolchildren and teachers has turned into a recurring strategy, forcing state governments to close or relocate schools. The 2025 attacks on several rural schools in Kaduna and the reported abduction of dozens of pupils in Niger State are reminders that education is now a frontline target. When schools close, a generation loses its future, and the recruitment pool for armed groups gets larger.
By 2026, the insecurity has spread into daily travel and urban life. Major highways that link cities are unsafe, and commuters plan journeys like military operations. Criminal networks now target travelers, businesspeople, and students, with ransom demands running into hundreds of millions of naira. A widely circulated video in early 2026 allegedly showed bandits displaying cash from ransom payments, with claims that the amount exceeded 200 million naira. Whether the exact figure is verified or not, the message it sent was real. Behind every bundle of notes are traumatized families, empty classrooms, and abandoned farms. It forces the question that citizens keep asking. Where is the protection Nigerians were promised?
The violence is also deepening in cities. Lagos, Port Harcourt, Kano, and Abuja are dealing with rising cases of armed robbery, street cult clashes, drug-driven crime, and kidnapping for ransom. Economic hardship and youth unemployment have created a pipeline into criminal activity. For many young people without jobs or skills, crime has become a rational, though destructive, means of survival. Markets close early, transport routes are avoided at night, and businesses pay heavy informal security levies. The cost of insecurity is now built into the price of goods, rent, and movement. It discourages both local enterprise and foreign investment, which in turn worsens unemployment. The country is trapped in a cycle. Insecurity destroys development, and underdevelopment creates more insecurity.
The root of the crisis is not just guns. It is governance failure. Weak institutions, poor intelligence coordination, delayed response to attacks, and corruption have reduced the effectiveness of security agencies. In several documented cases, communities alerted authorities hours before an attack, yet help arrived late or not at all. Beyond the security forces, the state has failed to deliver basic services, justice, and economic inclusion. When citizens lose faith that the government can protect them or give them a fair chance, they turn to ethnic militias, vigilantes, or criminal networks. Extremist groups and bandits exploit that vacuum. They recruit with cash, with protection, and with a twisted sense of purpose that the state is not providing.
The federal government has responded with increased military deployments, special operations, and budgetary allocations to defence and security. There are ongoing debates about state police and community policing models to improve local response. These are necessary steps, but they are not sufficient. Force can contain violence, but it cannot end the conditions that produce it. Security experts and civil society groups have consistently argued that without education, job creation, poverty reduction, and judicial reform, the country will only be treating symptoms. Deradicalization programs, school safety initiatives, and farmer protection schemes have been proposed, yet implementation remains slow and uneven.
The effects on national development are severe and measurable. Farming output has dropped in several food-producing states, contributing to inflation and food insecurity. Foreign direct investment continues to decline in sectors that require movement of goods and personnel. Social trust between ethnic and religious groups is eroding as communities blame each other for attacks. Humanitarian needs are rising, with millions displaced and children out of school. Each closed school and abandoned farm is a direct hit on Nigeria’s future productivity.
Insecurity in Nigeria in 2026 is therefore not just a security problem. It is a governance problem, an economic problem, and a social problem rolled into one. Solving it requires more than troops and checkpoints. It demands credible leadership that can rebuild institutions, create real jobs for young people, reform intelligence gathering, and deliver justice quickly. It requires protecting schools and farms as critical national assets, not afterthoughts. It requires that citizens see the state as more dependable than the bandit or the extremist. Until military action is matched with economic and institutional reform, Nigeria will remain unsafe, and the cycle of violence and poverty will continue. The country cannot develop in fear, and it will not find peace until the causes are treated with the same urgency as the symptoms