Crime

Kidnapping Inc.: Inside Nigeria’s expanding multi-billion naira ransom economy

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Kidnapping for ransom in Nigeria has evolved from sporadic criminal activity into what security analysts now describe as a structured and highly lucrative underground economy, with growing financial networks, recruitment pipelines, and laundering channels sustaining its expansion.

A recent analysis by SBM Intelligence estimates that Nigerian victims paid about ₦2.57 billion in verified ransom payments over a 12-month period, while total ransom demands recorded by criminal groups during the same timeframe exceeded ₦48 billion. The figures highlight what researchers describe as an increasingly “industrialised” kidnapping economy built around cash extraction from households and businesses.

The trend comes amid worsening insecurity across several regions, particularly the North-West, North-Central, and parts of the South, where armed groups continue to target commuters, farmers, schoolchildren, and rural traders.

Security typologies compiled by the Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU) and cited in the report suggest that kidnapping networks now operate through a multi-stage process that mirrors an organised supply chain.

These include target identification often aided by local informants, followed by abduction, ransom negotiation, and cash collection in remote areas designed to avoid surveillance. Funds are then moved through informal channels, including unregulated POS operators, mobile money agents, and peer-to-peer financial platforms.

Analysts also warn that proceeds are increasingly being converted into livestock purchases, cross-border trade, and other informal assets to obscure financial trails.

Data indicates that the North-West remains the epicentre of kidnapping activity, accounting for an estimated 62.2% of recorded victims. Katsina and Zamfara states have been identified as major hotspots, with hundreds of incidents and thousands of victims reported over the study period.

While fewer in number, abductions in the South-South and urban centres often involve significantly higher ransom demands, particularly in cases involving corporate executives or high-net-worth families.

The report also highlights growing concern over the convergence of criminal kidnapping networks with armed extremist groups.

Security assessments suggest that factions linked to Boko Haram and Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) have increasingly provided logistical support, weapons, or training to local bandit groups in exchange for financial returns from ransom operations.

This overlap, analysts warn, is turning ransom payments into a funding stream for broader insurgent activity, including the acquisition of weapons and the maintenance of remote forest strongholds.

Experts argue that the persistence of kidnapping-for-ransom networks reflects deeper structural weaknesses in Nigeria’s security and financial monitoring systems. Despite tighter banking regulations and Know Your Customer (KYC) requirements, criminal groups continue to exploit cash-based transactions and informal financial ecosystems.

Security consultant sources cited in the report caution that purely military responses may not be sufficient to dismantle what has become a profit-driven criminal industry.

“As long as the financial incentives remain intact, new actors will continue to replace arrested operatives,” a regional security analyst noted. “Disrupting the money flow is as critical as kinetic operations.”

The report calls for stronger coordination between security agencies, financial regulators, and fintech operators to track suspicious transactions in real time, alongside improved surveillance of informal cash distribution networks.

Without such measures, analysts warn that kidnapping-for-ransom could continue to operate as a parallel financial system, imposing what they describe as a “predatory tax” on households already facing economic strain.

As Nigeria continues to grapple with insecurity, the findings underscore a growing consensus among experts: kidnapping is no longer only a security threat, it has become a self-sustaining financial ecosystem embedded within the broader economy.

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