President Bola Tinubu has taken concrete steps to address Nigeria’s deepening insecurity, endorsing the activation of forest guards to reassert state control over vulnerable hinterlands and supporting measures to expand domestic technology production. The move follows long-standing calls for a combination of security reform and industrial policy to reduce both crime and reliance on foreign supply chains.
Nigeria security reforms and local measures
The administration has confirmed plans to deploy around 130,000 armed forest guards across the country’s estimated 1,129 forests, with each state contributing between 2,000 and 5,000 personnel. The programme is designed to push marauders out of remote areas where they have exploited gaps in policing and to protect mineral-rich zones targeted by external interests.
Alongside the security push, the government is being urged to stimulate local assembly of surveillance and power equipment. Recommendations include a temporary removal of import duties on CCTV cameras followed by support—through tax holidays, subsidised finance or equity investment—to encourage firms to assemble cameras, solar panels, drones, electricity meters and payment terminals locally within 18 to 24 months.
Proponents argue this approach would make CCTV affordable for ordinary Nigerians, create jobs and reduce the corruption risks associated with large single-supplier contracts. The article recalls a 2012 contract with a Chinese firm for 2,000 solar-powered cameras, in which an alleged $470 million arrangement resulted in only 40 installed cameras and widespread dysfunction after a $100 million advance payment.
To widen ownership and accountability, the plan envisages mandating a newly established CreditCorp to provide loans for citizens to buy Nigerian-assembled CCTV and solar systems. Public-supported ownership, it is argued, can improve monitoring coverage and deter crime while offering better prospects for recouping public funds than traditional procurement models.
Security analysts and the author stress two intertwined drivers of violence: internal factors such as religious extremism and communal tensions, and external actors seeking access to rare earths and other minerals. The piece draws comparisons to the Democratic Republic of Congo and conflicts in Darfur and South Sudan, suggesting a similar playbook where foreign interests exploit instability to extract resources.
The author calls for urgent reform of policing, including operationalising state and community policing, mass recruitment of young people into the police, and the creation of forest police units to secure mining areas. The reintroduction of a National Guard, modelled on internationally assisted forces, is also proposed to provide an elite force capable of responding to evolving threats.
Recent attacks in Zamfara, Benue and Plateau states—with hundreds killed and communities repeatedly targeted—underline the stakes. While the military has recorded tactical successes, many communities remain hard to reach and residents live in fear. The combined approach of boosting local industry, expanding community ownership of surveillance, and deploying trained security personnel aims to restore governance and protect citizens in remote areas.
As Nigeria pursues these reforms, coordination with international partners and oversight to prevent past procurement failures will be essential. If implemented carefully, the twin strategy of security deployment and local industrial development could reduce impunity, create jobs and make Nigeria more resilient to both internal and external threats.
Key Takeaways:
- President Tinubu has activated a 130,000-strong forest guards initiative and pushed for local CCTV assembly to tackle insecurity.
- Proposals call for duty waivers, tax holidays and credit support to encourage domestic production of CCTV, solar panels and payment devices.
- Author highlights past procurement failures, external resource-driven drivers of violence, and the need for expanded policing and youth recruitment.
- Recommended measures include national guard modelling, forest policing and community recruitment to secure resource-rich hinterlands.

















