Tackling Light Arms Proliferation

Vanguard Editorial, July 10, 2026

The proliferation of small arms and light weapons across Nigeria is not a distant threat; it is an immediate, corrosive reality that bleeds communities dry of security, livelihood and hope. Pistols, assault rifles and improvised firearms have become the currency of violence, multiplying the lethality of banditry, kidnapping, communal clashes and organised crime. Where once disputes might have been settled through dialogue or limited skirmishes, the ready availability of weapons turns every disagreement into a potential massacre.

Regions already battered by insecurity—North West, North East and North Central—bear the most visible scars. Farms lie fallow as fear chases families from their land; markets shrink and schools close when parents will not risk sending children into the path of gunmen. But proliferation is no regional anomaly. Urban centres and the southern states have seen spikes in cult violence, armed robbery and kidnappings, mainly by Fulani bandits, demonstrating that illegal arms are an equal opportunity accelerator of violence. The human cost is acute: lives snuffed out, communities uprooted and a widening deficit of trust among the citizenry.

The drivers are familiar yet stubbornly unresolved. Porous borders, illicit trafficking routes from neighbouring conflict zones, and domestic production of crude firearms create a steady supply. Corruption and weak enforcement render the toughest laws toothless, while poor inter agency coordination allows criminals to exploit gaps in intelligence and border control. Technology has improved the state’s surveillance abilities, but without investment in systems, training and accountability, such tools will remain underused or misapplied. Policy responses must be comprehensive and enduring.

Law enforcement should prioritise intelligence led operations to disrupt trafficking networks and dismantle local manufacturing hubs. Prosecution must be swift and impartial. Impunity is the oxygen of criminal enterprise. Equally important is institutional reform: rooting out corruption in customs, police and border services, and strengthening the National Centre for the Control of Small Arms and Light Weapons (NCCSALW) so it can lead a coordinated national effort.

Yet force alone will not extinguish the market for arms. Poverty, unemployment and social exclusion make young people susceptible to recruitment by violent groups. Addressing these underlying conditions requires long term investment in education, vocational training and economic opportunities—particularly in rural areas most affected by displacement and agricultural disruption. Communities themselves are indispensable partners.

Traditional and religious leaders, civil society and local security committees should be empowered to mediate conflicts, report illicit activity and foster norms that reject weapons as tools of dispute resolution. Regional cooperation is likewise essential: Nigeria cannot seal its borders in isolation; it must work with neighbours to choke cross border arms flows and dismantle transnational criminal networks.

The state’s obligation is clear: to act decisively, transparently and together with the people. Only through sustained political will, institutional reform and social investment can Nigeria begin to roll back the spread of arms that undermines its very future.

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