NHRC Raises Alarm Over 390 Killings, 202 Kidnappings, and 268,787 Rights Complaints Within One Month
The National Human Rights Commission’s latest monthly report paints a grim picture of Nigeria's security landscape, documenting 390 killings, 202 kidnappings, and more than 268,000 formal complaints, prompting urgent calls from human rights officials for immediate judicial and security interventions.
The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) has released a deeply troubling monthly human rights dashboard, revealing an alarming spike in violent crimes, state-level insecurity, and institutional abuses across Nigeria. According to data officially presented by the commission in Abuja, the country recorded at least 390 killings, 202 abductions, and a staggering 268,787 human rights complaints within a single 30-day reporting window, signaling a deteriorating humanitarian and security climate.
The monthly dashboard tracks structural violations across all six geopolitical zones, exposing the severe vulnerabilities faced by everyday citizens at the hands of non-state actors, bandits, and compromised security operatives. Tony Ojukwu SAN, the Executive Secretary of the NHRC, expressed deep concern over the data, describing the current trajectory as a major crisis that demands an immediate, coordinated overhaul of national law enforcement strategy. The commission's findings show that the North-West and North-Central regions continue to serve as the primary epicenters for mass casualties and ransom-driven kidnappings, while urban centers are seeing an unprecedented influx of domestic violence, child abandonment, and economic rights violations.
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