KEY POINTS
- Brig Gen. Ishaya Ibrahim pledged to deepen military-NSCDC cooperation during his tenure as 17th Brigade commander.
- NSCDC Katsina commandant Abbas Moriki also received officials from EFCC, the Correctional Service and the Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution.
- All visiting agencies emphasized multi-agency collaboration as essential to tackling Katsina’s security challenges.
The 17th Brigade of the Nigerian Army and the Katsina Command of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps have reaffirmed their partnership against terrorism, banditry and other criminal activity in one of Nigeria’s most volatile northern states.
Brigade Commander Brig.-Gen. Ishaya Ibrahim paid a formal courtesy call Friday on NSCDC State Commandant Abbas Moriki at the corps’ Katsina headquarters, using the visit to signal that the security alliance forged between both agencies would grow stronger under his watch.
A Broader Security Roundtable
“The NSCDC and the Nigerian Army share a long history of partnership, and this relationship will be further strengthened during my tenure as the brigade commander,” Ibrahim said.
Moriki further welcomed the new brigade commander and commended the army for its sustained operations against terrorism and criminality across the country. He matched Ibrahim’s pledge with one of his own.
The same day, Moriki received a succession of senior security and institutional officials, each arriving to align their agencies more closely with the NSCDC.
Dr. Joseph Ochogwu, Director-General of the Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution, called on the commandant alongside Abdulrashid Sule, State Controller of the Nigeria Correctional Service, and Chinedu Ozugha, acting zonal director of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission’s Katsina directorate.
Why It Matters
Furthermore, all three emphasized multi-agency coordination as the core strategy for stabilising the state. Moriki gave each delegation the same assurance he gave the army.
Katsina, which borders Niger Republic and shares ethnic and linguistic ties with communities across the frontier, has endured years of armed bandit attacks on farming communities and kidnappings along its rural highways.
The state has also been one of the focal points of the Nigerian military’s ongoing counterinsurgency and counter-banditry campaigns in the northwest.
Formal coordination meetings between agency heads carry operational weight and determine how agencies share intelligence and structure joint patrols in the field.


