By Comrade Abbas Ibrahim 

By all standards, the recent violent invasion of Kano’s bustling GSM Farm Centre Market by suspected political thugs is a dangerous development that must be condemned in the strongest possible terms. What transpired on Monday, 27th April 2026, was not merely an attack on traders and innocent citizens; it was an assault on public peace, economic prosperity, and the very foundations of democratic engagement.

Farm Centre is not just another market. It is one of the largest mobile phone and information technology hubs in Northern Nigeria, attracting traders, investors, and customers from across Nigeria and neighbouring countries. Its vibrancy has made it a critical contributor to Kano’s economy and a symbol of the state’s commercial strength. Any attack on such a strategic economic centre is, by extension, an attack on Kano itself.

The scenes were deeply disturbing. Shops were looted, vehicles and motorcycles vandalized, and many innocent people sustained injuries. Traders, many of whom are still struggling to recover from previous devastating fire outbreaks, have once again been thrown into uncertainty, pain, and financial hardship.

Even more troubling is the fact that the Kano Passport Office is located within the vicinity. Such brazen violence near a sensitive federal facility raises serious security concerns and paints an unfortunate image of Kano before local and international visitors.

Although the politician allegedly linked to the incident has denied involvement, the incident underscores a much larger and more troubling reality: the growing recklessness of political actors and their inability or unwillingness to restrain their supporters.

As the 2027 general elections approach, Kano cannot afford a return to the dark days when political contests were settled through violence, intimidation, and destruction. Democracy thrives on ideas, persuasion, and the ballot not on thuggery, fear, and bloodshed.

Political leaders must understand that they bear both moral and legal responsibility for the actions of their followers. Silence in the face of violence is complicity. Ambiguity only emboldens criminal elements who exploit political rivalries for personal gain.

While the swift intervention of the police, including the deployment of teargas and the arrest of six suspects, helped to restore order, the incident has once again exposed the glaring limitations in the security architecture around Farm Centre. The police division is evidently overstretched, to effectively respond to large scale disturbances in such a densely populated commercial space.

This is precisely why the Kano State Government must immediately strengthen the operational capacity of the Kano State Vigilante Group and, more importantly, fully leverage the Kano Neighbourhood Safety Corps.

Established with an initial strength of 2,000 personnel drawn from all 44 local government areas, the Corps was specifically designed to complement conventional security agencies. The law establishing it wisely insulates it from partisan politics, ensuring professionalism, neutrality, and community trust. Under the capable leadership of retired Lieutenant Colonel Aminu Abdulmalik, the Corps possesses the discipline, structure, and local intelligence needed to provide rapid response and preventive security.

The time has come for their strategic deployment to critical economic hubs such as Farm Centre.

Recommendations for Immediate Action

First, all political parties and aspirants must publicly commit to peaceful conduct and take responsibility for the actions of their supporters.

Second, law enforcement agencies must thoroughly investigate the incident and prosecute all those found culpable, regardless of political affiliation.

Third, security presence at Farm Centre should be significantly enhanced through a joint task force comprising the Police, Civil Defence, and Kano Neighbourhood Safety Corps.

Fourth, the Kano State Government should establish a permanent rapid response security unit dedicated to protecting major commercial centres.

Fifth, political leaders must invest in civic education, teaching their supporters that elections are contests of ideas, not battles of survival.

Finally, traditional rulers, religious leaders, civil society organizations, and the media must intensify advocacy against political violence and promote a culture of tolerance.

A Test for Kano

Kano stands at a critical crossroads. The state can either allow desperate politicians and criminal elements to drag it backwards or rise above violence and preserve its proud reputation as the commercial heartbeat of Northern Nigeria.

The attack on Farm Centre must serve as a wake up call. Political ambition must never be allowed to supersede public safety. The livelihoods of hardworking citizens must never become collateral damage in the pursuit of power.

Kano deserves better. Its traders deserve protection. Its democracy deserves maturity.

The journey to 2027 must begin with a firm and collective rejection of political violence in all its

forms. Anything less would be a betrayal of the people.

Comrade Abbas Ibrahim writes from Kano and can be reached @ abbasibrahim664@gmail.com

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