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Farmers helpless as banditry takes its toll on food production

The FrontierThe FrontierNovember 30, 2025 1664 Minutes read0

•Bandits

Stakeholders in the agricultural sector have called on the govern­ment at all levels to join forces to tackle insecurity and the effects of climate change to mitigate food shortage in Nigeria in 2026 as al­ready predicted by global bodies.

Recall that on Tuesday the United Nations World Food Pro­gramme (WFP) warned that the growing instability across north­ern Nigeria, including the surge in attacks, was driving hunger to levels never seen before, reports Sunday Independent.

The warning followed the re­lease of the latest Cadre Harmon­isé, a regional food security anal­ysis that classifies the severity of hunger, which found that nearly 35 million people were projected to face severe food insecurity during the 2026 lean season, the highest number recorded in Nigeria.

The WFP said the attacks by insurgent groups in Nigeria have intensified throughout 2025.

“Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM), an al-Qae­da affiliate, reportedly carried out its first attack in Nigeria last month.

“Meanwhile, the insur­gent group, Islamic State in West Africa Province (ISWAP) is said to be pursuing its expansion across the Sahel.

“Other recent incidents in­clude the killing of a brigadier soldier in the northeast and attacks on public schools in the north, where several teachers and hundreds of schoolgirls remain missing,” the statement said.

David Stevenson, WFP Coun­try Director and Representative in Nigeria, said: “Communities are under severe pressure from repeated attacks and economic stress.

“If we can’t keep families fed and food insecurity at bay, growing desperation could fuel increased instability with insur­gent groups exploiting hunger to expand their influence, creating a security threat that extends across West Africa and beyond.”

The WFP said Northern Ni­geria is experiencing the most severe hunger crisis in a decade with rural farming communities the hardest hit.

“Nearly six million people in the north are projected to face crisis levels of hunger or worse during the 2026 lean season – June to August – in the conflict zones of Borno, Adamawa and Yobe states.

“This includes some 15,000 people in Borno State who are expected to confront catastroph­ic hunger (Phase 5, famine-like conditions).

“Children are at greatest risk across Borno, Sokoto, Yobe and Zamfara, where malnutrition rates are highest.”

Speaking few days ago at the 2025 National Agricultural Show in Karu, Nasarawa State, Arc. Kabir Ibrahim, President of Nigeria Agribusiness Group (NABG), said the small holder farmers and small-scale produc­ers were currently “groaning due to low prices of their produce and products, high prices of inputs, low output generally, insecurity and weak purchasing power of the Naira, making agribusiness suffer a serious setback among the majority of Nigerians.”

He said: “The resilience of the smallholder farmers is be­ing stretched and government intervention to moderate prices of inputs and resuscitating the Guaranteed Minimum Price (GMP) and National Agricultur­al Reserve Agency (NAFRA) will be quite prudent at this point in order to ease the challenges in the national food system.”

Some of the stakeholders who spoke to our correspondent maintained that insecurity was driving catastrophic hunger in Nigeria.

An agricultural researcher who spoke anonymously, said many farmers across the country had abandoned their farmlands due to the worsening insecurity.

He maintained that insecurity and climate change were ravag­ing the agricultural value chain across the country.

For instance, bandits report­edly abducted four rice farmers in Bokungi village, Edu Local Government of Kwara, barely 24 hours after an attack on Eruku town in the State.

Bandits reportedly attacked the farmers while they were working on their farms.

According to reports, two farmers were initially abducted while packaging harvested rice, followed shortly by the kidnap­ping of two more from a neigh­bouring farm, bringing the total number of victims to four.

Sources described the attack as coordinated, with bandits invading the farms and firing sporadically before abducting the victims.

Similarly, it was widely re­ported that gunmen suspected to be bandits kidnapped about 24 farmers in Angwar Kawo, a suburb of Shiroro in Niger State on Thursday, last week.

Also, suspected Boko Haram terrorists reportedly abducted 12 female farmers in Mussa district, Askira-Uba Local Government Area of Borno State.

It was gathered that the fe­male farmers were abducted while returning from their farm­lands around 5pm on Saturday, last week.

Confirming the incident in a telephone interview on Sunday, the State Police Public Relations Officer, Nahum Daso, said the command has launched an In­vestigation into the issue.

He said: “There was an abduc­tion yesterday in Askira-Uba. 12 female farmers were abducted by suspected Boko Haram terrorists when they were coming back from the farm.”

The stakeholders also identi­fied the nagging issue of climate change as another issue that fuels food insecurity and hunger.

According to a report by the Cheetahs Policy Institute, climate change poses severe risks to food security in Nigeria.

“This surge is driven by re­cord inflation, ongoing conflict, and climate-related disasters.

Hassan Musa, Agribusiness entrepreneur, urged the govern­ment to recognise how climate change such as droughts, heat, and floods have exacerbated hunger and food insecurity in the country.

Musa, therefore, urged gov­ernment at all levels to embrace climate-smart agriculture, infra­structure, irrigation facilities to ensure all- year-round farming.

The World Health Organisa­tion also warned that climate change threatens clean air, safe water, nutritious food, and safe shelter in Nigeria.

Experts in the agricultural space have called on Nigerian farmers to embrace soilless farming, smart agriculture, and backyard farming.

They have asked the federal government and states to scale up agricultural mechanisation and promote the adoption of modern farming technology and practices.

They underscored the need for improved irrigation, drought resilience programmes, policy support from government and sustainable land management.

They posited that without im­mediate and sustained action, Ni­geria’s food security crisis could get worsened, unless practical and genuine measures were ini­tiated to halt the current hunger and food insecurity ravaging the country.

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