Photo: Mohammad Badaru Abubakar, former Minister of Defence
By Didimoko A. Didimoko
In a country where political officeholders hardly succumb to pressure, no matter how bad they perform, the resignation of Minister of Defence, Mohammad Badaru Abubakar, a key ally of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, at a moment when the country is in the grip of worsening insecurity, is triggering questions within the security establishment about what may have forced his abrupt exit. Although the presidency said Badaru resigned on health grounds, senior officials, security analysts and political observers point to a mix of pressures that may have contributed to his decision.
Badaru’s resignation was confirmed late Monday in a statement from presidential spokesman Bayo Onanuga, who noted that President Bola Tinubu accepted the minister’s letter and commended him for his service. But the timing of his departure — coming amid a spike in mass abductions, rural attacks and targeted killings — has drawn scrutiny inside and outside government.
In the days leading up to the resignation, armed groups kidnapped 25 students in Kebbi State and abducted about 300 schoolchildren in Niger State, reviving the trauma of previous school raids. Additional attacks in Sokoto, Kogi and Kwara have intensified criticism of the government’s security strategy. A series of violent incidents, including the kidnapping of a bride and her wedding party in Sokoto, the abduction of a pastor and his wife in Kogi, and the killing of three Nigeria Immigration Service officers in Katsina, further underscored the erosion of public confidence.
Investigators examining the broader context point to several possible causes behind the defence minister’s departure. One line of inquiry centres on rising operational strain within Nigeria’s military and security agencies. Officers say the armed forces are overstretched across multiple fronts: fighting Boko Haram and Islamic State West Africa Province in the Northeast, attempting to contain bandit groups in the Northwest, confronting communal militias in the North-Central and dealing with piracy and oil theft in the Niger Delta. Badaru was increasingly caught between political expectations and on-the-ground realities that showed little sign of rapid improvement.
Another possible factor is the growing international pressure on Nigeria, following allegations made by former U.S. President Donald Trump that Christians were being targeted for extermination in the country. The claim triggered diplomatic exchanges with Washington and renewed calls from advocacy groups to classify Nigeria as a hotspot for religious persecution. The allegation complicated Nigeria’s foreign relations at a time when pressure on the defence leadership was already high. Badaru’s identity as a Muslim leading the defence ministry added a sensitive dimension to the narrative, as some Western voices framed the violence primarily through a religious lens.
The Nigerian government has repeatedly rejected the genocide allegation, arguing that the violence is overwhelmingly criminal rather than sectarian. Officials note that predominantly Muslim communities in Zamfara, Katsina and Sokoto have suffered some of the heaviest casualties, and that both churches and mosques have been attacked by armed groups whose motives are tied to ransom economies, territorial control and illicit resource extraction. Nonetheless, the diplomatic fallout required the government to dispatch a delegation led by National Security Adviser Nuhu Ribadu to Washington, signalling how seriously Abuja treated the accusation.
Political dynamics within the administration may also have played a role. Badaru, a two-term former governor of Jigawa, entered the defence ministry with a strong political pedigree but limited military background. His tenure coincided with rising internal debates on strategy, funding gaps, the slow pace of military procurement and disputes over intelligence coordination. Insiders say the pressure on the ministry intensified following the mass kidnappings in Niger and Kebbi, which embarrassed the government and reignited public anger over inadequate early-warning systems in vulnerable communities.
Badaru’s resignation comes at a critical time for the Tinubu administration. As one of the most senior officials in charge of security, his exit leaves a vacuum in a sector where continuity is vital. The government must now manage multiple overlapping threats: extremist groups in the Northeast, expanding bandit networks in the Northwest, armed militias in the Middle Belt and criminal syndicates in the South.
Badaru, an accountant trained at Ahmadu Bello University and an alumnus of the National Institute for Policy and Strategic Studies, previously built a prominent business career before transitioning into national politics. His departure marks a significant shift in Nigeria’s security hierarchy and raises fresh questions about whether the government’s current counterinsurgency and anti-banditry strategies are sustainable, effective or in need of a fundamental overhaul.

















