The news that a retired Nigerian general has died in captivity, prompting a review of hostage protocols by the UK counter-terror unit, is a development that should chill the blood of anyone with a passing interest in the stability of nations. It is a reminder, if one were needed, that the world is sliding into a state of quasi-barbarism where even the most distinguished figures of the old order are not safe. The general, a man who presumably spent his career defending the integrity of the Nigerian state, ended his days in the hands of kidnappers. It is a fate that the Romans would have recognised: the patrician seized by the Goths, a symbol of a civilisation in decay.
The UK's involvement is telling. This is not merely a domestic Nigerian tragedy. It is a sign that the infection of disorder has spread to the point where the imperial centre must rethink its own procedures. The review of hostage protocols is a bureaucratic response, but it masks a deeper unease. The British state, once the arbiter of global order, now finds itself scrambling to protect its citizens and its interests from a tide of lawlessness that it can no longer control. One thinks of the late Roman Empire, constantly revising its treaties with the barbarians, always one step behind.
The general's death is also a commentary on the nature of modern warfare. He was a retired man, presumably enjoying the twilight of his life, yet he was snatched from his bed or his car, a victim of a conflict that has no front lines and no rules. This is the character of our age: a constant low-level insurgency, a war of all against all, where no one is safe, not even those who once commanded armies. The Victorians, with their rigid class structures and their faith in progress, would have been appalled. They believed that a retired general was a figure of respect, a repository of wisdom. Now he is a bargaining chip, a corpse.
And what of the Nigerian state? It is a nation that has been bleeding for decades, its wealth siphoned off, its institutions hollowed out. The death of a general is a symptom of a deeper malaise: the failure of the postcolonial project. Nigeria was meant to be the great hope of Africa, a vibrant democracy, a powerhouse of the continent. Instead, it has become a byword for corruption, violence, and chaos. The general's fate is a mirror held up to the nation itself: captured, helpless, dismembered.
The UK's review of protocols will no doubt produce a white paper, a set of recommendations, a new training manual. But these are palliatives. The real question is whether the West has the will to confront the sources of this disorder. Are we prepared to invest in stabilising failed states, or will we content ourselves with updating our hostage negotiation guidelines? The answer is obvious. We will do the latter, because it is cheaper and less messy. And so the decline will continue.
We live in an age of intellectual decadence, where we prefer to analyse problems rather than solve them. The death of the Nigerian general is a tragedy, but it is also a lesson. It tells us that the old certainties are gone, that the structures of power are crumbling, and that we have no replacement. The Romans had the barbarians at the gate. We have them inside the house, wearing suits and carrying briefcases, or lurking in the shadows with Kalashnikovs. The outcome will be the same.
Let this be a warning. The general died in captivity, but we are all captives now, prisoners of a world that is spinning out of control. The UK counter-terror unit can review its protocols all it likes. It will not change the fact that the empire is failing, and that the barbarians are winning.










