Tag Archives: Nigerian politics
Bandits or Terrorists? Nigeria’s Unequal Justice and the Politics of Labels in Nigeria
By Engr. Tamunofiniarisa Brown
Introduction
Nigeria stands at a moral crossroads. The same nation that crushes dissenters in one region rolls out amnesty programmes for violent actors in another. The contradictions are stark; the hypocrisy is unmissable.
While bandits—heavily armed groups terrorising the Northwest—walk free under the guise of “dialogue” and “rehabilitation”, those who once fought for justice in the Niger Delta are forever branded militants, and Biafran activists are crushed as terrorists.
It begs the question: Is Nigeria truly one nation—or a country divided by tribal bias and political convenience?
The Bandit Paradox
Across northern Nigeria, “bandit” has become an oddly gentle term for groups responsible for mass killings, abductions, and the displacement of thousands. Despite their atrocities, these armed gangs are often treated as wayward children rather than criminals.
Some state governors have held peace talks with them; others have...