The report revealing 270 enclaves of terrorists and bandits in Nigeria highlights the severe challenge posed by ungoverned spaces where various armed groups operate with impunity across the country.1
This figure was recently cited in a report by the Nigerian newspaper Vanguard, drawing attention to the vast territories that have slipped out of state control.2
Geographic and Operational Scope
The vast majority of these enclaves are concentrated in the heavily forested and remote areas of Northern Nigeria, where banditry and terrorism have converged:
- North-West and North-Central: The primary operational bases for bandit groups and their increasingly interconnected criminal networks are the extensive forest reserves in states like Zamfara, Katsina, Kaduna, and Niger.3
- In Zamfara State alone, reports have indicated the existence of over 100 large bandit camps.4
- These areas provide ideal cover for kidnapping operations, cattle rustling, and arms trafficking, often facilitated by porous borders with the Sahel region.5
- North-East: The traditional stronghold of Boko Haram (JAS) and the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) is the North-East, primarily Borno State and the Lake Chad Basin.6
- Enclaves like the Sambisa Forest and the Mandara Mountains serve as strategic command and control centers for jihadist factions.
- Crime-Terror Nexus: The proliferation of these enclaves is fueled by a volatile nexus where highly organized criminal groups (bandits) are increasingly collaborating with or being co-opted by ideological terrorist factions (JAS, ISWAP, and Ansaru) to expand their influence and funding across the region.7
- Other Regions: While concentrated in the North, smaller criminal camps and hideouts also exist in forest reserves and creeks in other regions, including parts of the South-South and South-East, primarily utilized by kidnappers and illegal miners.
The sheer number of these ungoverned territories underscores the scale of the security challenge facing Nigerian security forces, who remain severely stretched across multiple theaters of conflict.