Zamfara State Governor Dauda Lawal says he refused to pay a N300 million ransom demanded in 2019 after kidnappers abducted his brothers. Speaking at an ARISE News and THISDAY Townhall Conference in Abuja, Lawal said he told the kidnappers not to negotiate and that he would not “pay a dime,” arguing that paying ransom encourages more abductions. He said his brothers were eventually released after about three months in captivity without any ransom payment.
Lawal also used the experience to renew his call for the establishment of state police. He argued that although governors are widely described as “chief security officers,” they lack constitutional command and control over security agencies operating in their states. He said this limits accountability, since leaders can be held responsible for insecurity without direct authority over policing.
He further said Zamfara invests heavily in security operations, funding more than 30% of activities, procuring over 500 vehicles for security agencies, and recently providing 35 armoured personnel carriers and Mine-Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) vehicles. He added that the state has deployed surveillance and attack drones and said strengthening security institutions through funding, welfare, training and technology—rather than ransom—remains the solution to banditry and kidnapping.