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Feature

Dangerous New Normal As Nigerians Are Getting Used To Insecurity News Reports

There was a time when news reports of a bandit attack would dominate conversations across the country. Social media would be flooded with outrage, hashtags would trend for weeks, and public pressure would mount for urgent action.

Today, such reaction appears to be fading because there is a new normal.

Increasingly, reports of attacks, kidnappings, and mass abductions in parts of Nigeria are now met with a brief wave of concern from Nigerians, then silence. The stories surface, generate discussion for a few hours, and disappear from public attention almost as quickly as they came, waiting for the next tragedy to happen.

What is emerging is not just insecurity, but a quieter and more unsettling development: a growing sense of normalisation.

In several communities across the North-West and parts of the North-Central, repeated exposure to violent incidents has begun to reshape public reaction. Residents still fear these attacks, but many now process them with a sense of familiarity that would have been unthinkable a few years ago.

The shift is subtle but visible. Where there was once shock, there is now fatigue. Where there was outrage, there is now resignation to fate. And where stories once sparked national debate, they now struggle to trend beyond a few hours.

In Nigeria today, bad news report no longer shock anyone, it simply arrives, is acknowledged, and is replaced with next one.

For many Nigerians online, the pattern is similar. A report of an attack breaks, generates concern, and is quickly replaced by entertainment, politics, or other issues of less importance. The cycle repeats so frequently that it begins to strip such reports of emotional weight in the public space.

Recent cases, including the mass abduction of students and teachers in schools and the reported killing of a kidnapped teacher in Oyo State, have followed a familiar pattern – brief national attention, usual government’s rhetoric, followed by a swift shift in public focus to other trending issues.

This shift does not necessarily indicate indifference to suffering. Rather, it reflects an overwhelmed information environment where distressing news has become constant and normalised. In such conditions, sustained emotional response becomes increasingly difficult to maintain.

However, the implications are deeply troubling.

Experts warned that when violence becomes routine in public consciousness, it risks weakening pressure on authorities to respond with urgency. If crises no longer generate strong reactions, they may also lose visibility in national discourse.

Nigeria has faced prolonged insecurity challenges for years, but the growing sense of “normal” around violent reports marks a new phase, one in which the frequency of incidents risks dulling public response.

Still, beneath reduced online outrage and shorter attention spans, the human cost remains unchanged. Each report represents disrupted lives, grieving families, and communities forced to adapt to conditions no society should accept as routine.

The silence after each negative headline may feel normal, but it reflects something more dangerous: a country slowly learning to live with what should remain unacceptable.

المصدر: Leadership (Nigeria)

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