The Northern Emancipation Network (NEN) has lamented the worsening insecurity in Zamfara State, describing it as becoming uncontrollable.
While urging Governor Lawal Dare to address the problem, the network urged him to spend more time in the state to tackle the challenges of insecurity and less time outside.
In a press statement signed and issued to newsmen, Sulaiman Abbah, NEN’s secretary-general, said that despite the previous government’s efforts to curtail insecurity, the situation in the state is deteriorating. The northern youths are not impressed with the new governor’s attitude.
Abbah, in the statement, said that with a governor who does not appear interested in seeking answers to the challenges of insecurity to which the state is exposed, the people continue to live and die under the dictates of killers, kidnappers, rapists, and sundry criminal groups that have recently deprived them of the right to live in peace and security.
“Killers and other criminals appear to have sensed a paralyzing vacuum at the highest levels of leadership in the state since the inception of the new government, and they grow more confident and acquire more competence in subverting the state and people’s security.
“The people of Zamfara have shed enough tears and blood in the last three weeks without an appropriate response from those with responsibilities to protect them.
“Villages are being emptied as hundreds of people, due to constant attacks, are relocating to the already congested urban areas of the state, deepening poverty,” he said.
According to NEN, for the very first time ever, the popular Shinkafi market had been completely overrun by criminal attackers, and all activities crippled and deserted.
The group insisted that Zamfara is once again becoming its former safe haven for different terrorist groups, downplaying the description of criminal elements in the region as bandits.
NEN, therefore, called on the governor to end the unnecessary stay in Abuja and to work for the security of the people who elected and entrusted their lives and future in his care.
“Zamfara did not vote for you to go about chasing shadows fighting over vehicles and other individuals’ properties but to work to improve their condition in terms of security, most importantly,” Abbah said.
In the alternative, NEN said President Bola Ahmed Tinubu should take the necessary steps to order the governor back to Zamfara to face the primary task he was elected for.