The immediate priority should be the safe recovery of the victims. In hostage situations, speed is important, but accurate intelligence and careful planning are often more critical than launching a rapid operation without knowing the captors’ exact location.
To rescue the abducted students and teachers, security experts generally recommend a combination of intelligence gathering, targeted security operations, negotiations where necessary, and community cooperation rather than a rushed military assault. Recent reports indicate that the Federal Government has already deployed a specialised rescue team, increased security presence, and approved the recruitment of forest guards to strengthen search-and-rescue efforts in the Ogbomoso axis.
Below are steps that could improve the chances of a successful rescue include:
1. Intensifying Intelligence Operations
Use drones, aerial surveillance, phone tracking, informants, and intelligence networks to determine the exact location of the abductees.
Identify supply routes and communication channels used by the kidnappers.
2. Deploying Specialised Rescue Units
Continue using specially trained anti-kidnapping and hostage-rescue teams rather than conventional forces. Reports indicate such units have already been deployed.
3. Leveraging Local Knowledge
Work closely with local hunters, vigilantes, and community leaders who understand the terrain and forest routes.
Similar operations in other parts of Nigeria have benefited from collaboration with local security stakeholders.
4. Maintaining Pressure on the Kidnappers
Secure escape routes, monitor forests, and conduct sustained patrols to limit the kidnappers’ movement and access to supplies.
5. Negotiation and Psychological Operations
Where appropriate, establish communication channels that may buy time, obtain intelligence, or facilitate the safe release of hostages.
6. Protecting Operational Secrecy
Avoid public disclosure of sensitive military movements or rescue plans that could alert the kidnappers. Some observers have raised concerns that excessive publicity may complicate rescue efforts.
7. Community Information Sharing
Encourage residents to provide credible information through confidential channels.
Many successful anti-kidnapping operations begin with local intelligence.
8. Strengthening Forest Security
Expand surveillance and the planned forest guard initiative to deny criminals safe havens.
9. Inter-Agency Coordination
Ensure seamless cooperation among the military, police, intelligence agencies, civil defence, and local security groups.
10. Long-Term Measures
Establish permanent security outposts, improve rural policing, secure schools, and address the factors that enable kidnapping networks to operate. Reports indicate that requests for additional security infrastructure, including a military presence in the area, are under consideration.
