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Violent crimes and insecurity on Nigerian highways: A tale of travelers' trauma, nightmares and state slumber

Journal

HELIYON
Volume 9, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e20489

Keywords

Insecurity; Nigerian highways; State slumber; Trauma; Violent crimes

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This paper examines the vulnerability of travelers to crimes such as kidnapping, abduction, armed robbery, and even death on Nigeria's highways. The increasing insecurity on Nigerian highways has become a major concern, with criminals terrorizing and traumatizing travelers at will. The study indicates that the high rate of abduction and murder has resulted in a sense of helplessness, trauma, and vulnerability among Nigerian road travelers. The paper recommends the decentralization of the Nigeria Police Force structure to address the issue effectively and create a safer environment on the highways.
This paper examined the vulnerability of travelers to kidnapping, abduction and armed robbery attacks and in some extreme cases, death along Nigeria's highways. Insecurity on the nation's highways became a contemporary criminological discourse following the emergence of new strands of criminality like militancy, terrorism, kidnapping, herdsmen-farmers violence, communal conflicts and banditry. Nigerian highways have become the major operational hotspots for criminals who harass, terrorize, and traumatize travelers at will. With the ever-rising insecurity on Nigerian highways, the military and paramilitary offensives deployed by the Federal Government have not yielded the desired results culminating in the description of government's inertia as a form of state slumber. Data for this study were sourced from a content analysis of reported violent highway crimes by credible mainstream Nigerian newspapers, spanning a period of one year, from July 2020 to July 2021. Adopting the Social Disorganization Theory, the study indicated that the worrisome nature of insecurity on Nigeria's highways resulting in the high rate of abduction and murder of people of diverse military, professional, socioeconomic and political backgrounds has engendered a sense of helplessness, trauma and vulnerability among Nigerian road travelers. The paper recommends the de-centralization of Nigeria Police Force structure to create State Police that will encourage and electrify effective and better people oriented patrolling and management of insecurities on the Nigerian highways.

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