Monday, November 17, 2025 - The Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF) says it can eliminate banditry across Nigeria within one year if the federal government provides advanced technology and operational support.
Kailani Muhammad, national chairman of the CJTF, made the
statement during the weekend in Abuja after receiving a certificate of
partnership as chairman of the West African JTF from Charles Omini, a special
envoy and ambassador to West Africa for the International Human Rights
Protection Service/Forum.
Muhammad said CJTF operatives already have intelligence on
the hideouts of criminal groups but lack the equipment needed to act
effectively.
He urged President Bola Tinubu to give all service chiefs a
year deadline to work with the CJTF to end insecurity nationwide.
“If actually we mean business, we know, even in the states
where all these things are happening, we know their locations, we know where
they are,” he said.
“We are calling on Mr President to give all the security
chiefs a timeline of one year. They should sign an undertaking, and in the next
one year, in collaboration, they will work with us to make sure that we wipe
out insecurity in Nigeria. If they don’t do it, they should resign.”
He also asked the federal government to equip the CJTF with
advanced surveillance systems, CCTV coverage and artificial intelligence tools.
According to him, Nigeria’s borders remain poorly secured,
with about 2,000 inlets and exit routes used by armed groups.
“If the government can help us, we need to put CCTV as it’s
obtained in Mexico now and America,” he said.
“So, these should be positioned 100 kilometres where you see
the influx of these hoodlums. We have AI now.”
Speaking at the event, Omini called for stronger
collaboration among security agencies and greater reliance on technology to
tackle Nigeria’s complex security problems. He said no single agency can solve
the challenges alone.
“I call on the security heads at all levels to come up with
very strong strategic collaborations and partnerships with the relevant
agencies and organisations,” he said.
“We’re in a global and digital world. I appeal to security
agencies to engage more of advanced technology to combat these challenges.”
Omini also emphasised the need for dialogue and urged armed
groups to end violence.
“Those who are carrying arms, who are kidnapping, for how
long are they going to do this?” he asked.
“We are appealing to them, these killings and kidnapping
must stop. Enough is enough.”

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