Kankara Boys: ‘Repentant bandit repents again, rejoins fellow criminals in the forest’
Auwal Daudawa, the alleged bandit leader who masterminded the abduction of over 300 students in Kankara area of Katsina state has reportedly returned to his vomit.
This happened less than three months after he was celebrated by politicians for “shunning criminality”.
A security source and two other sources close to the bandit said Daudawa has relocated to one of the forests, near the border with Katsina, Daily Trust reported.
The middle-aged bandit allegedly coordinated the mass abduction of the students of Government Secondary School Kankara, on December 12, 2020, the first of such abduction by any criminal group outside Boko Haram in the North-East.
About two months later, Daudawa was paraded before the governor in Gusau, where he proclaimed his decision to be a changed man.
Daudawa and five of his lieutenants surrendered 20 AK-47 rifles, ammunition and a rocket-propelled grenade (RPG) launcher, during the ceremony.
Sources familiar with Daudawa’s latest decision said he packed out his family and his lieutenants back to Jaja forest in Zurmi local government on Monday.
“He called one of his contacts in Gusau to inform him that he had arrived at the forest and decided to pick up arms again. He did not inform anybody before he left,” one of the sources told Daily Trust on Wednesday.
Daudawa was said to have been frustrated by the lack of proper engagement after he had laid down arms.
He and members of his gang who “repented” were housed in a government chalet for weeks before a house was secured for him in Damba, in the outskirts of Gusau, to move in with his family.
“His upkeep was being shouldered by the government. I don’t know what it was he needed. Perhaps his tall expectations were not met,” one security source in Gusau disclosed.
His action, analysts say, is a major setback for the controversial peace deal and amnesty for bandits being championed by Zamfara governor Bello Matawalle.
A prominent bandit in the state, Shehu Rekeb, said that more repentant gunmen will move back to the forest to avoid being targeted. He accused government of insincerity in its dealing with the Fulani armed men.
A senior security official said last night that the collapse of the pact was only predictable as it was not premised on a sustainable framework.
“Honestly, there is a problem with that arrangement because you cannot claim to have a peace accord when there is no paperwork where the parties sign on specified conditions,” he told Daily Trust.
He also lamented that lack of rehabilitation and counselling for the repentant bandits which, he said, cannot be substituted with financial handouts.
The governor had on assumption of office two years ago re-introduced the amnesty window, urging armed Fulani youths who have been terrorising rural communities in the state to lay down their arms.
The police have had its critics, the most prominent being the governor of neighbouring Kaduna state, Nasir El-Rufai, who insist that bandits are not trustworthy and could not be placated into permanently abandoning their criminal activities.
In opting for amnesty, Matawalle was toeing the path followed by his predecessor Abdulaziz Yari who in 2018 announced a N1 million prize on each AK-47 rifle turned in by the bandits. The pact was however short-lived.
Katsina governor Aminu Bello Masari last year vowed not to dialogue with the bandits again after some repentant bandits re-joined hostilities.