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Nigeria’s Proposed Mining Ban Sparks Backlash From Industry Stakeholders

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Nigeria’s efforts to curb insecurity in mineral-rich regions have run into resistance from miners, who say a proposed nationwide suspension of mining activities could cripple the sector without addressing the root causes of violence.

The federal government is considering a temporary ban as part of a broader security response to rising attacks, illegal mining, and armed group activities in states like Plateau, Nasarawa, Zamfara, and parts of the North Central. Officials argue that mining sites have become hotspots for criminal operations and that a pause may help security agencies regain control.

But miners say the plan is misguided.

The Miners Association of Nigeria and several industry groups have warned that shutting down legitimate operations will punish law-abiding companies while doing little to stop illegal miners, who often operate under the protection of armed groups. They argue that the government’s inability to enforce existing regulations is the real problem.

According to the association, thousands of jobs are at stake. A ban could halt production for small-scale operators, disrupt export timelines, and deepen the financial strain on a sector already dealing with fluctuating global prices and weak infrastructure. Many miners also fear that a shutdown might push more people into unregulated artisanal mining, thereby worsening the very crisis the government seeks to resolve.

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Stakeholders insist that insecurity around mining sites is tied to wider governance failures, weak monitoring systems, unlicensed mining camps, poor border controls, and corruption that enables illicit mineral trade. Instead of a blanket ban, they are calling for targeted measures such as stricter licensing requirements, community policing structures, improved coordination between federal and state authorities, and the rapid deployment of special security units to high-risk areas.

Some experts warn that a ban could have political implications as well. States with active mining revenue streams worry about the economic fallout, especially at a time when many are grappling with budget deficits. Local communities that depend on mining for livelihoods are already anxious about job losses.

For now, the government says the proposal is still under review. Still, the pushback highlights a growing tension: how to tackle insecurity without eroding investor confidence or choking an industry viewed as a potential driver of Nigeria’s diversification agenda.

Miners maintain that collaboration, not a shutdown, is the path forward. The coming weeks will determine whether the government chooses a security-heavy approach or embraces a broader reform strategy that keeps the sector running while confronting the threats that surround it.

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