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How Niger State Government Secretly Paid Millions Of Naira As Ransoms To Three Bandit Groups To Free Abducted Commissioner

Idris was abducted in his home in Baban Tunga, Tafa Local Government Area of Niger State, on August 9, 2021. A few hours after his abduction, the terrorists demanded N500million from his family.

Apabakura Dan-Makaranta, a 34-year-old bandit leader in Niger State says that the government paid a ransom before Muhammed Sanni Idris, the state Commissioner for Information, was released, FIJ reports.
Idris was abducted in his home in Baban Tunga, Tafa Local Government Area of Niger State, on August 9, 2021. A few hours after his abduction, the terrorists demanded N500million from his family.
It was later reduced to N180million.

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Dan-Makaranta said although the exact amount paid was unknown as three bandit groups were involved, his own group received N67 million from the state government.
“Your government lied to you because it wanted to bury its shame,” FIJ quoted the terrorist as saying.
“Of course, the government paid. They paid more than N67 million. We were three groups involved in the commissioner’s abduction, and when he would be released, N67 million was paid to our group. I can’t say what they paid the leaders of the other groups.
“The people who brought the money told us in a forest around Kagara that it was from the state governor, but they begged us to keep it a secret.”
Dan-Makaranta also dismissed a rumour that his group had killed Abdulhameed Ibrahim, the district head of Yakila, Kagara, Rafi Local Government Area of the state, kidnapped over a year ago.
After spending four days with his abductors, Idris was released on August 12. Abubakar Sani Bello, the governor of the state, had rejected the ransom option during several meetings held on the commissioner’s abduction, following its abolishment during heated negotiations to rescue kidnapped students of Government Science College, Kagara, Niger State, in 2021.
Ibrahim, the district head of Yakila village, was kidnapped on December 10, 2020, when the Dan-Makaranta bandit faction struck his hometown.
A family source said the district head had alerted his subjects upon hearing that the terrorists were wreaking havoc in Garin Gabas, a neighbouring village.
Unfortunately, he became a victim. He was kidnapped alongside a health worker identified as Halima, her child, as well as Ilyasu Mukhtar, an All Progressives Congress (APC) youth leader in Garin Gabas.
“Seven million naira was negotiated as the ransom for him and other kidnapped victims from Garin Gabas,” the source said.
“N3million for the district head, N3 million for the health worker and her child, and N1 million for the youth leader.”
The victims’ relatives gathered the ransom within a week, and the money was delivered to the bandits in their den by a few delegates.
“The hope of the delegates was to return home with the kidnapped victims, but it wasn’t the case,” he said.
“Only the health worker and her child were released. They withheld the district held and the APC Youth leader with the intention of conveying them to Zamfara.”
As luck would work for him, Mukhtar, the APC youth leader, escaped.
“The youth leader was lucky to have an escape route the second day when the terrorists were asleep,” he said. “The district head was brutally tortured and incapacitated.”
Since then, no one has heard from him, said the family source.
“Only God knows if he is still alive or dead as the bandits no longer reach out to the family.”
Speaking on Tuesday, Dan-Makaranta said the district head was still alive, contrary to a rumour that he had died. He has not been released because his ransom was paid to a bandit faction not responsible for his abduction, he said.
“In Niger, we have about nine bandit groups operating,” he said.
“The family of the district head paid his ransom to the wrong group, not mine.”
He did not give further details about the other groups in the state.
According to the 34-year-old bandit leader, he graduated from Ahmadu Bello University (ABU) in 2009 with a diploma in mechanical engineering.
Dan-Makaranta, a Fulani man, said he joined the cattle rustling terror group led by one Tsohon Buhari in Zamfara.
“I became a bandit around 2010, when my father and my brother were murdered by some vigilantes from Birnin Gwari, with the support of the military,” he recalled.
“Their offence was being Fulani. That was the time farmer-herders crisis was lingering.”
He said he was disappointed the Kaduna State Government broke its promise to investigate the matter.
“When justice would not be served, I decided to join the bandit group in Zamfara. I would be away from home for over a year before I could return.”
He embarked on a vengeance mission to Kaduna after forming his team in 2015.
“Since that time, we have been in a fierce battle with the vigilantes,” he said.