FG is ready to listen to bandits and settle them without much costs – Minister of Police Affairs

Minister of Police Affairs, Muhammad Dingyadi has said that the federal government is ready to listen to repentant bandits and settle them without any costs, as part of the solutions to the insecurity issue in the north-west and north-central regions of the country.

Dingyadi said this on Tuesday, September 14, during an interview on Channels Television’s Politics Today.

Commenting on the ongoing military operations against bandits in Katsina, Zamfara, Sokoto and other states where their activities have been alarming, he said the present administration intended to reintegrate repentant bandits into the larger society, saying the government would closely monitor those who have turned a new leaf to ensure they do not return to their old way of life.

He said “Anybody willing to surrender and do it honourably and honestly; the government is ready to listen. The government is ready to see what they can do to settle them down without much cost. When you talk of amnesty, it is a relative term and what the Federal Government is trying to say is that: ‘Let us see those who have surrendered their arms, let us listen to them, let us chronicle them, let us receive them’; we cannot just throw these people away because they are all Nigerians. Of course, they are criminals, they have committed atrocities, they have committed crimes, but according to the international laws, when you surrender from a war zone, you are not killed, you are not maimed, you are allowed to have your say. We are listening to them to see how we can integrate them into the larger society. What we are trying to do is to get them settled in their various communities, to let them have a kind of means of livelihood so that they can integrate peacefully and honourably into the society.”

Related posts

Tinubu cancels engagements as 39 killed in Anambra, Abuja food stampedes

Families cry out as Abuja DSS arrests lovers in Osun

Catholic Archbishop condoles with families of Abuja stampede victims