Friday, May 22, 2026

Pushback in Nigeria over ex-Boko Haram fighter reintegration

Communities in Nigeria's northeast, particularly in Borno state, are grappling with a difficult question: Can those who once took up arms against them truly return and be accepted?

Nigerian officials hope to reintegrate more than 700 former Boko Haram fighters into civilian life under its deradicalization program, Operation Safe Corridor. Authorities say the initiative is key to ending a decade-long conflict. But in communities that have borne the brunt of extremist violence, the policy is reopening wounds that have yet to heal.

The program has been running for years, but each new wave of reintegration continues to spark debate.


What is Nigeria's Operation Safe Corridor?

Operation Safe Corridor, launched in 2016, is Nigeria's deradicalization program for former Boko Haram fighters who surrender to the military.

Authorities say it is aimed at encouraging defections and reducing recruitment. Participants undergo screening, deradicalization, psychological counselling and vocational training before being cleared for reintegration.

Over 2,000 individuals have passed through the initiative, according to Nigerian authorities. Officials say only those assessed as "low risk" are released back into society.

Usman Tar, former commissioner for information and internal security in Borno state, which this year saw renewed a violence, told local media: "When they return, there is a screening by the Department of State Services and they're screened by the community leaders."

Authorities say the scheme is working.

"We did not receive any negative report from anybody from any one of them," Abdullahi Sabi Ishaq, special assistant on security to the Borno state government, told local media.

"They were accepted by the community, and we hope this one will also be accepted."


Concerns for violence-weary Nigerian communities

But on the ground, acceptance is far from guaranteed.

In Borno state, some residents like Muhammad Sharif told DW the idea of living alongside former fighters is very unsettling. He suggests former fighters should be relocated away from communities they once attacked and describes the arrangement as "improper."

"If you forgive somebody and you want to integrate him, take him to another local government where the offended people will not see that person at their midst. They will not bring us peace," he told DW.

Abraham Philip said communities are still dealing from trauma, even as the government pushes ahead with the program.

"Yes, peace is taking place also but destruction is also taking place," he told DW, referencing recent attacks, including the Monday Market, the post office and the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH) bomb blast in Maiduguri.

Philip says communities have questions for the government, because "a lot of things have been happening. There are some people saying these are the results of the reintegration that has been taking place."


Could reintegrated Boko Haram members relapse?

Others say the issue is not just about reintegration — but whether former fighters have truly changed. For Maiduguri resident Usman Abubakar, the distinction between theory and reality is key.

"In principle, it is a very good idea," he said.

But he adds: "We have had instances where repentant Boko Haram threatened to go back to the bushes when the promises the state government made to them were not fulfilled. That is why I don't want to call them repentant. I want to call them surrendered because you cannot see their mind."

Some Nigerians outside the conflict-affected northeast also remain divided. In Abuja, civil servant Hauwa Ajeje told DW: "It's going to be a vicious cycle. We'll be recycling the same individuals."

Raphael Ogbaji, a student at the University of Abuja, had a more optimistic take: "If they have chosen the path of peace and the path of repentance, why not give them the benefit of the doubt? Every human being can change."


Nigerians debate over justice for Boko Haram survivors

Lawyer Ahmed Abubakar told DW reintegration raises serious questions about justice for victims.

"Those that have been affected negatively by the activities of these terrorists, they need restitution," he said, questioning why former fighters are being rehabilitated while many victims are still displaced.

"Some of the victims are still staying in Internally Displaced People's camps. Some have lost their homes and are not getting any form of justice," he said.

While Abubaker acknowledges that international law allows reintegration, he says state authorities have not been clear about who is being reintegrated or their level of involvement in extremist violence.

By Chinaza Samuel, DW


Nigeria bets on deradicalization program in North West

Weatherford selected for Nigeria deepwater work

Weatherford International has secured a deepwater integrated completions contract offshore Nigeria from ExxonMobil affiliate Esso Exploration and Production Nigeria (EEPNL), Weatherford announced on Thursday.

The company will provide upper and lower completions solutions, with equipment prepared through its global supply chain and supported locally in Nigeria. The contract falls under Weatherford’s well construction and completions portfolio.

“This contract reflects our ability to deliver integrated completions solutions for deepwater operations. We will provide technologies designed to support well integrity, reliability, and efficient execution in complex offshore environments,” said Weatherford CEO Girish Saligram.

Weatherford is a global energy services company that provides drilling, completions, production and intervention services.

In Nigeria, ExxonMobil engages in oil and gas exploration and production, petroleum products manufacturing and power generation. The company has said it plans to invest up to USD 1.5 billion in the development of Nigeria’s deepwater acreage, including towards the revitalisation of production in the Erha, Owowo and Usan oilfields.

Thursday, May 21, 2026

Nigeria launches AI-driven education platform

The Federal Government of Nigeria has launched the Nigeria Education Data Infrastructure (NEDI), a centralised AI-powered platform designed to consolidate the country's fragmented education data systems into a single national registry covering more than 240,000 schools.

Speaking at the National Stakeholders' Workshop in Abuja, Minister of Education Dr. Maruf Tunji Alausa described NEDI as the government's "single source of truth" for the education sector, enabling real-time, evidence-based planning and governance across the country's sprawling and historically underserved school system.

The platform has already captured records for over 32 million learners and 220,000 schools across 21 states.

The launch is partly a response to a damaging pattern the Ministry says persisted for years undetected. According to Ministry data, nearly 80% of development bank and partner investments over the last decade were concentrated in just two geopolitical zones - yet those same regions continue to record Nigeria's lowest literacy and numeracy rates.

"If we had used data before, we would have known where the investment needed to go," Alausa said. He added that future funding models would shift to results-based allocations tracked directly through the system, cutting off the possibility of capital flowing to areas without demonstrated need or impact.


What the platform does

At the core of NEDI is the Nationwide Learner Identification Number (NLIN), a unique student identifier aligned with Nigeria's existing National Identification Number framework that will track each learner's complete academic journey from basic education through to tertiary level.

The system unifies previously siloed datasets from the Universal Basic Education Commission, the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board, and the Nigerian Education Loan Fund into a single dashboard. School administrators and policymakers can monitor enrolment figures, infrastructure deficits, teacher qualifications, and facility availability, including water and computer access, from one interface.

AI and data analytics tools embedded in the platform will automate real-time tracking of educational gaps and flag localised system vulnerabilities as they emerge. The government also intends to integrate labour market demand data, enabling the system to actively guide students toward courses aligned with current workforce requirements.

"With this platform, we can know the number of students, teachers' qualifications, available classrooms, computers, and even water facilities in any school from one dashboard," Alausa said.

The initiative represents one of the most ambitious education data overhauls on the African continent, targeting full coverage of Nigeria's estimated 240,000-plus schools once deployment extends beyond the current 21-state footprint. By ensuring no child or vulnerable household remains invisible within Nigeria's development planning, the government says NEDI will directly inform budgeting, donor coordination, and policy prioritisation going forward.


Boko Haram kill 33 fishermen, loggers in Nigeria

Boko Haram jihadists have killed 33 fishermen and loggers in two attacks in Nigeria’s restive Borno state in the country’s northeast, two sources told AFP Wednesday.

Monday’s attacks killed 27 fishermen in Mafa district and six loggers in Dikwa district, according to an anti-jihadist militia and a fishermen union official in the region.

“The fishermen were intercepted by Boko Haram fighters on motorcycles two kilometres from Mafa town,” Babakura Kolo, an anti-jihadist militia assisting the military said.

“All the 27 fishermen were shot dead,” Kolo said.

They were returning with a catch of lungfish from a dried up pond, said Abdullahi Sani, an official of a fishermen’s union in the state capital Maiduguri, 52 kilometres (32 miles) away.

Sani gave the same figure of 27.

Earlier, six loggers were shot dead by Boko Haram fighters while collecting firewood in the bush outside Malam Maja village in nearby Dikwa district, Kolo said.

They were displaced by jihadist violence and were living in makeshift camps in Dikwa town, 90 kilometres from Maiduguri, Kolo said.

Boko Haram and the rival Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) have increasing targeted loggers, farmers, fishermen, herders and metal scrap collectors in the region, accusing them of spying on them and passing on information to the military.

Two weeks ago, Boko Haram fighters shot dead 18 loggers who had gone into the bush outside Abaram village in Borno state’s Bama district, according to anti-jihadist militia and residents.

Tens of thousands have been killed and millions displaced in the 17-year-old insurgency.

Most of the displaced live in makeshift camps, relying on food handouts from international charities.

But with the drying up of aid due to funding cuts, the displaced are left to fend for themselves.


Anti-drug agency shut down large meth laboratory in Nigeria

Nigeria’s anti-drug agency said it has busted a transnational organized drug syndicate involving Nigerians and Mexicans in the southwestern region of the country.

The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency said late Wednesday that its special operations unit shut down “an industrial-scale clandestine laboratory” in a remote forest in the Ijebu area of Ogun state, which shares a border with Lagos, the country’s economic capital. The agency added that it is the biggest drug bust ever in the country.

The agency said in a statement that it arrested seven members of the “cartel,” which included four Nigerians and three Mexicans, during the operation, and three more in follow-up arrests.

“This network did not just traffic drugs; they were actively manufacturing industrial-scale quantities of highly lethal illicit substances right on our soil, threatening the national security and public health of Nigeria,” Brig Gen Mohamed Buba Marwa, the agency’s head, said.

According to the statement, the operation resulted in the seizure of 2.4 tons of chemical materials, including methamphetamine, worth 480 billion naira ($363 million) and two vehicles.

In recent years, West and Central Africa have emerged as a hot spot for global trafficking and manufacturing of illicit drugs due to porous borders and corruption, according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.