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Home » How Cybersecurity is Reshaping Nigeria’s National Security Conversation

How Cybersecurity is Reshaping Nigeria’s National Security Conversation

The central message is unmistakable: Nigeria is now facing hybrid insecurity, where physical attacks are reinforced by digital tools...

Prof. Ojo Emmanuel Ademola by Prof. Ojo Emmanuel Ademola
April 21, 2026
in Digital Lens
Reading Time: 5 mins read
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 NSA Nuhu Ribadu and the Disingenuous Arming of Miyetti Allah | National Cybersecurity Council | Nigeria’s national security

Nuhu Ribadu, Nigeria's National Security Adviser

Nigeria’s national security landscape is undergoing a profound transformation. The threats confronting the nation today are no longer confined to physical spaces or traditional battlefields.

They have expanded into the digital realm, where criminals, insurgents, and opportunistic actors now exploit technology to amplify violence, manipulate public perception, and destabilise communities.

This evolving reality formed the core of my conversation on Global TV today with Priscilla Obasi, where we examined the intersection between insecurity, cyber‑enabled crime, and the urgent need for a modernised national security architecture.

The central message is unmistakable: Nigeria is now facing hybrid insecurity, where physical attacks are reinforced by digital tools, psychological warfare, and online propaganda.

To respond effectively, the nation must rethink its security strategies, strengthen its cyber capabilities, and integrate digital intelligence into every layer of national defence.

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Digitalised Kidnapping: A Disturbing New Frontier

One of the most alarming developments in recent years is the digitalisation of kidnapping. Criminals now record videos of abducted victims, often in distressing conditions, and circulate these images online.

This trend reveals a troubling evolution in the psychology and methodology of criminal networks. These videos are not accidental. They are deliberate tools of digital intimidation, crafted to break the will of families, pressure negotiators, and instil fear in the wider population.

The criminals understand the power of visual media in the digital age. A single video can travel across the country in minutes, triggering outrage, panic, and helplessness.

This shift demonstrates that kidnapping is no longer a purely physical crime. It has become a cyber‑enabled operation, where digital platforms serve as amplifiers of violence.

The abduction may occur in a forest or on a highway, but the psychological warfare is waged on smartphones, social media feeds, and encrypted messaging apps.

The impact is devastating. Families experience repeated trauma each time the video resurfaces. Communities feel vulnerable. The nation’s collective psyche absorbs yet another blow. In effect, these videos function as digital terrorism, designed to weaken public confidence and challenge the authority of the state.

Cybercrime as a Driver of Modern Insecurity

The use of digital tools in kidnapping operations places these acts squarely within the domain of cybercrime.

Criminals now rely on mobile phones, encrypted messaging platforms, and online channels to coordinate operations, negotiate ransom, and evade detection. These tools give them speed, anonymity, and reach, advantages that traditional policing methods struggle to counter.

Digital tools enable criminal networks to coordinate across long distances without physical meetings. They allow criminals to mask their identities using burner phones and encrypted applications. They provide a platform for spreading fear through viral videos and threatening messages.

They facilitate real‑time ransom negotiation, sometimes across borders, and they support the discreet movement of money through digital channels. They also help criminals recruit informants and collaborators without exposing themselves physically.

This fusion of physical and digital tactics has created a hybrid crime model. The front end is physical—abduction, movement, detention. The back end is digital, communication, propaganda, financial negotiation, and psychological manipulation. Nigeria’s security response must therefore be equally hybrid: boots on the ground supported by brains on the network.

Are Nigeria’s Security Agencies Prepared for Hybrid Threats?

Nigeria has made commendable progress in building cybercrime units, digital forensics capabilities, and specialised investigative teams. However, readiness remains uneven.

Cyber units exist, but they are not yet fully integrated into mainstream security operations. The nation’s security architecture was designed for an analogue era, but the threats we face today are digital, networked, and fast‑moving.

When disturbing videos surface online, the ideal response should be swift and coordinated. Security agencies should immediately begin digital forensics to trace the source of the video, identify the device used, analyse metadata, and determine possible locations.

The findings should then be shared instantly with police, military, and intelligence agencies so that cyber intelligence informs field operations in real time. Authorities should also engage telecoms and digital platforms to gather additional data, limit harmful circulation, and support investigations.

However, in practice, videos often circulate widely before any visible intervention. This delay is driven by coordination gaps, bureaucratic bottlenecks, limited real‑time monitoring, and capacity constraints. Criminals exploit these weaknesses, knowing that the state’s response may be slow or fragmented.

The Cybercrime Act: Strong Foundation, Weak Enforcement

Nigeria’s Cybercrime Act provides a solid legal foundation for prosecuting digital threats, extortion, and intimidation. The law recognises offences involving the misuse of digital platforms. However, the challenge lies in awareness, enforcement, and interpretation.

When digital tools are used in violent crimes like kidnapping, investigators and prosecutors need clearer operational guidelines.

Judges require deeper understanding of digital evidence. Law enforcement officers need training to recognise the cyber elements of hybrid crimes. The legal framework exists, but it must be sharpened, modernised, and better applied.

A National Security Architecture Under Pressure

The first 10 questions of today’s interview reveal a consistent theme: Nigeria’s security architecture is under pressure from threats it was not originally designed to handle.

The nation’s biggest weaknesses in tackling cyber‑enabled insecurity can be summarised in three areas: coordination, manpower, and technology. Of these, coordination is the most critical. Even with limited tools, a well‑coordinated system can achieve results. But with poor coordination, even the best tools will underperform.

Nigeria’s security agencies often operate in silos, with each institution pursuing its own mandate without a unified national strategy. This fragmentation slows down response time, weakens intelligence sharing, and creates avoidable duplication.

Meanwhile, the shortage of trained cyber professionals across security institutions limits the nation’s ability to detect, analyse, and respond to digital threats. Technology gaps further complicate the situation, as many agencies still rely on outdated tools that cannot match the sophistication of modern criminal networks.

A Call for Strategic Restructuring

Nigeria must urgently restructure its national security approach to reflect the realities of the digital age. This requires a shift from analogue to digital, from agency‑centric to system‑centric, from reactive to intelligence‑driven, and from fragmented to coordinated. Cybersecurity must be elevated as a core pillar of national security, not a peripheral technical issue.

This is why I have consistently advocated for the establishment of a National Cybersecurity Council—a unified command structure that coordinates cyber intelligence, protects critical infrastructure, harmonises policy, and ensures real‑time collaboration between cyber units and field operatives. Without such a body, Nigeria will continue to fight modern threats with outdated structures.

In addition, the nation must embrace a forward‑looking security doctrine that recognises the speed, sophistication, and psychological impact of digital threats. Criminal networks are evolving, leveraging technology to amplify their reach and influence.

Our response must therefore be equally adaptive, data‑driven, and strategically aligned. A National Cybersecurity Council would not only strengthen operational synergy but also position Nigeria to anticipate threats, build resilience, and safeguard its digital sovereignty in an increasingly interconnected world.

Conclusion: The Urgency of Now

Nigeria stands at a defining moment. The threats we face are evolving, and our defence must evolve with them.

Kidnapping, terrorism, and organised crime are now digitally empowered. Our response must therefore be digitally intelligent.

If Nigeria strengthens its cyber capacity, integrates its security architecture, and builds a culture of national cyber awareness, we can significantly reduce the space in which these hybrid crimes operate.

Cybersecurity is no longer the future of national security, it is the present. And Nigeria must act now.

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