Editorials
Maga Abduction – The system that let Kebbi Girls down
Monday’s horrific attack on Government Girls Comprehensive Secondary School, Maga, in Kebbi State, which left Vice-Principal Malam Hassan Makuku dead and 25 young girls kidnapped, is more than a regional tragedy.
It is a glaring indictment of Nigeria’s failing security architecture and a wake-up call to a nation long accustomed to preventable attacks on its children.
Governor Mohammed Nasir Idris’ revelation that the Department of State Services (DSS) had issued credible intelligence warning of a potential strike before the assault is deeply troubling.
The DSS had advised an emergency Security Council meeting and recommended continuous protection for the students, a precaution the state government dutifully implemented.
Yet, despite these warnings, the security personnel allegedly abandoned their posts just thirty minutes before the kidnappers struck.
This is not a lapse; it is a catastrophic failure.
The eyewitness accounts are chilling. Teachers and students had undergone emergency drills, yet the gunmen operated with impunity, killing the Vice-Principal who courageously tried to defend his pupils.
Parents were left helpless as their daughters were dragged from the hostel, and communities witnessed once again the terrifying consequences of security negligence.
The escape of three girls should be no consolation; it underscores both the bravery of the children and the glaring absence of professional vigilance by those entrusted with their safety.
President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and the federal government have rightly condemned the attack, directing urgent rescue operations.
Northern Governors have expressed solidarity and outrage, highlighting that schools must be sanctuaries of learning, not hunting grounds for criminals. But statements and condemnations are not enough.
The question that Nigerians must urgently ask is: How can this happen despite prior intelligence? Who will be held accountable for this failure?
This tragedy should ignite a nationwide reckoning on the effectiveness of our security agencies.
Intelligence is only as valuable as the response it triggers. In this case, prior warnings, strategic deployments, and the presence of armed officers failed to prevent a nightmare.
The systemic weaknesses, poor discipline, lack of accountability, and insufficient operational oversight, cannot be ignored.
The human toll is devastating.
A dedicated Vice-Principal, a protector of children, is dead.
Twenty-five young girls have had their innocence stolen and their futures cast into uncertainty.
Families live in fear, students are traumatized, and communities question whether the state can ever safeguard them.
Every Nigerian should feel the weight of this tragedy because it speaks to the vulnerability of children across the country, not just in Kebbi State.
Moving forward, the establishment of a special investigation panel led by the DSS is necessary but insufficient unless it translates into real accountability and structural reform.
Rescue operations must succeed, perpetrators brought to justice, and security agencies forced to demonstrate competence, transparency, and commitment to public safety.
Nigeria’s children deserve more than speeches, promises, and photo opportunities.
They deserve safety, protection, and a state willing to prioritize their lives above bureaucracy, negligence, and politics.
The tragedy at Maga is a stark reminder: a nation that fails to protect its children has already failed its future.

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