In a grim reminder of the human cost of Nigeria's kidnapping crisis, a retired general has been abducted from his home in Kaduna State. The news landed as the UK issued a stark call for action against the ransom gangs that have turned insecurity into a lucrative trade. The general, whose name has not been released pending family notification, was taken in the dead of night, his guards overpowered, his compound breached. It is a story that has become tediously familiar: an affluent target, a well-organised gang, a community left in fear. But this time, the victim's military pedigree adds a cruel irony. If a man who once commanded battalions cannot sleep safely in his own bed, what hope for the ordinary citizen?
The UK's intervention, while welcome, raises uncomfortable questions. Britain has long condemned the ransom economy, but its latest statement feels like a lecture from a country that has not faced the impossible choices Nigerian families endure daily. Pay the ransom and fuel the industry, or refuse and lose a loved one. It is a moral trap with no clean exit. The cultural shift here is palpable: kidnapping has moved from the fringes of organised crime to a mainstream enterprise. In the bars of Lagos and the markets of Kano, the calculus of risk and reward is whispered. People adjust their lives, hire private security, avoid certain roads. The social fabric frays.
Yet amid the despair, there is resilience. Communities in the north have begun forming vigilante groups, not out of bravado but necessity. They know the police are outgunned and the army distracted by other fronts. The government's response feels reactive, a series of firefighting measures rather than a coherent strategy. The general's abduction is a symptom of a deeper failure: a state unable to guarantee the most basic of rights, the right to safety. As the UK pushes for action, one wonders if its advice will translate into changed tactics on the ground. For now, the nation waits, hopes, and dreads the next headline.












