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Complete Security Guide

65 Safety Tips for Nigerians

Every tip explained in detail — practical, actionable, and written for real-world Nigerian conditions.

65 Tips Covered 8 Categories 20 min read Updated June 2026

Safety in Nigeria requires more than awareness — it demands deliberate, consistent habits. Whether you live in Lagos, Abuja, Kano, or a rural community, the threats you face are real: road insecurity, petty crime, digital fraud, home break-ins, and emergency situations. Increasingly, schools and places of worship have become targets of armed bandits, kidnappers, and terrorists. This guide takes all 65 essential safety tips and explains the why, the how, and what to do for each one — so you don't just know the rules, you understand them well enough to act on them.

Travel Security

Tips 1–10
1
Avoid traveling at night, especially on highways known for security incidents.
Night travel dramatically increases your exposure to armed robbery, kidnapping, and accidents on poorly lit roads. Many major highways — including Lagos-Ibadan, Abuja-Kaduna, and Enugu-Port Harcourt — have recorded serious security incidents after dark. If you must travel long-distance, plan to arrive at your destination before sunset or wait until morning. Even within cities, nighttime movement in unfamiliar areas raises risk. The simple rule: daylight travel is safer travel.
2
Inform family or trusted friends of your travel plans before leaving.
Always tell someone where you are going, your expected route, and when you expect to arrive. This is your first line of accountability. If something goes wrong — your vehicle breaks down, you're robbed, or there's an emergency — someone will know to look for you. Send a text with your departure time, destination, and ETA. If you don't check in by a set time, they should raise an alarm. This simple habit has saved lives.
3
Share your live location with a trusted contact during long journeys.
Tools like WhatsApp Live Location, Google Maps location sharing, or Find My Friends allow someone to track your movement in real time. Activate this before leaving and let it run throughout the trip. If your phone goes silent unexpectedly, your contact can see your last known position and alert authorities. Make sure your contact knows how to interpret the location data and what steps to take if you stop responding. A charged phone with live location active is one of the most powerful safety tools available to you today.
4
Research security conditions in areas you intend to visit.
Before traveling to any state or region, check current security reports. Sources include the Nigerian Security Tracker, local news outlets, and trusted social media groups. Some routes and states are currently under travel advisories due to banditry, insurgency, or communal conflicts. Don't rely on word-of-mouth alone — situations change. A road that was safe three months ago may not be safe today. A few minutes of research can change your route or timing and prevent a life-threatening encounter.
5
Use reputable transport companies and avoid unauthorized vehicles.
Stick to well-known road transport companies like ABC Transport, GUO, Young Shall Grow, or others with a track record of safety. Avoid flagging down random buses or cars, especially when traveling alone or with children. Unauthorized vehicles have been used to kidnap passengers, especially on interstate routes. When using ride-hailing apps in cities, confirm the driver's name, plate number, and photo before entering the vehicle. Never accept a substitute vehicle sent by an unregistered driver.
6
Remain alert at motor parks, markets, and crowded public places.
Pickpockets, bag-snatchers, and con artists operate in high-traffic areas like Oshodi, Onitsha main market, and major motor parks across Nigeria. Keep your bag in front of you, your phone out of reach, and your attention on your surroundings — not your screen. Be wary of distractions: someone bumping into you, asking for change, or pointing at your shoes is often working with an accomplice. Awareness is your primary defense in crowded spaces.
7
Avoid displaying large amounts of cash, expensive jewelry, or valuables.
Flashing cash at ATMs, in markets, or in public transport is one of the easiest ways to attract criminal attention. Counting large sums of money in public, wearing expensive chains visibly, or using a high-end device in an unsafe area makes you a target. Keep large cash in inner pockets or a money belt. Consider using transfer apps instead of physical cash for large transactions. Looking unremarkable is a security strategy.
8
Keep emergency contacts readily available on your phone and written down.
Save key numbers in your phone: Nigeria Police (199), emergency (112), your state's NEMA office, your family doctor, and two trusted contacts. But don't rely solely on digital storage — write these numbers down on a card in your wallet. If your phone is stolen or dead, you'll still have access. Teach these numbers to your children too. In a crisis, you won't have time to search — the numbers need to be instant.
9
Learn the locations of nearby police stations, military checkpoints, and hospitals.
Whenever you arrive in a new area — whether for business or leisure — take a few minutes to identify the nearest police station and hospital. This knowledge is invaluable during emergencies. If you're involved in an incident, you need to know where to go or where to direct help. Use Google Maps offline if you'll be in areas with poor connectivity. Preparation before a crisis is worth more than any reaction during one.
10
Verify information before acting on rumors circulating on social media.
False security rumors spread rapidly on WhatsApp and Twitter/X in Nigeria — reports of fake checkpoints, fabricated attacks, or misleading alerts can cause panic, dangerous driving decisions, or unnecessary movement into risky areas. Before changing your route or travel plans based on a message, cross-check with official sources, credible news platforms, or people with direct knowledge. Acting on misinformation can put you in more danger than the original rumor.

Personal Awareness & Behaviour

Tips 11–20
11
Avoid discussing your financial status publicly.
Mentioning your salary, savings, property, or upcoming large transactions in public — at a salon, on a bus, at a social gathering — can reach the wrong ears. Criminals and fraudsters listen. Don't discuss financial windfalls, business deals, or real estate purchases openly. Even mentioning that you just received your JAPA visa processing fee or completed a land purchase can mark you for targeting. Financial discretion is personal security.
12
Be cautious when strangers request personal information.
A stranger asking for your full name, address, phone number, workplace, or BVN — even under the guise of a survey, competition, or official-looking form — should raise immediate suspicion. Identity thieves and fraudsters use this information to target victims. Ask why the information is needed and who is requesting it. Legitimate organizations rarely need sensitive personal data from strangers on the street. Your personal data is an asset — protect it like one.
13
Keep important documents securely stored and backed up digitally.
Original documents — NIN slip, international passport, birth certificate, land documents, certificates — should be stored in a locked, fireproof location at home and never carried unnecessarily. Make high-quality scans of all critical documents and store them in a secure cloud folder (Google Drive or Dropbox with two-factor authentication). If originals are lost, stolen, or destroyed, digital copies will significantly speed up replacement processes. A document backup can save you months of bureaucratic pain.
14
Avoid isolated routes and abandoned areas, especially alone.
Shortcuts through undeveloped land, isolated walkways, abandoned buildings, or poorly lit back roads expose you unnecessarily — even during daylight hours. Criminals look for opportunity; isolation provides it. Stick to populated, well-lit routes where witnesses are present. If you must use a quieter path, do it with company. The few minutes saved by a shortcut are never worth the risk.
15
Be cautious when accepting invitations from unfamiliar individuals.
Invitations to private homes, unfamiliar offices, remote locations, or late-night events from people you barely know carry real risks. Romance scams, trafficking schemes, and robbery setups often begin with a seemingly innocent invitation. If you must go, inform someone of where you're going, the person's contact details, and check in frequently. Trust should be earned — not extended on first contact.
16
Do not announce travel plans publicly on social media.
Posting "Traveling to Abuja tomorrow!" or "Home alone this weekend" gives potential criminals a schedule and an opportunity. Burglars monitor social media for these signals. Similarly, posting photos of expensive items you own, your car, or your home's interior can attract unwanted attention. Post the memories after you return — not the plans before you leave.
17
Teach children basic safety procedures and emergency contacts.
Children should know their full name, home address, a parent's phone number, and what to do if they get separated in public or feel unsafe. Teach them to approach a shop owner, police officer, or security guard — not just any adult. Run simple drills at home. Make it a conversation, not a scare. A child who knows what to do in an emergency is far safer than one who panics.
18
Establish a family emergency communication plan.
Decide in advance: Where does the family meet if there's a crisis at home? Who do you call first? What do you do if phones aren't working? Assign roles — who grabs the emergency bag, who checks on elderly relatives, who contacts neighbors. Practice it at least once a year. Families that have a plan respond calmly; families that don't, panic.
19
Stay informed through credible news sources.
Follow reliable Nigerian news platforms: Channels TV, Punch, Vanguard, The Nation, NAN, and regional outlets for your area. Turn on notifications for security updates from NEMA and state emergency management agencies. Credible information helps you make better decisions about when to travel, when to stay home, and when to take precautions. Being informed is not paranoia — it's preparation.
20
Maintain situational awareness in hotels, event centers, and public gatherings.
When you enter a new space — a hotel lobby, conference hall, church, or concert venue — take a moment to note the exits, identify security personnel, and assess the crowd. In the event of a security incident, you'll need to move quickly. At public events, avoid the innermost areas of large crowds where stampedes are more dangerous. Keep your phone accessible but not visibly flaunted. A few seconds of observation can make the critical difference.
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Home Security

Tips 21–30
21
Install strong locks, security lights, and alarms in your residence.
Burglars look for easy targets. A property with motion-sensor security lights, visible CCTV cameras (or even dummy cameras), reinforced doors, and quality padlocks is significantly less likely to be targeted. Security lights that activate at night are particularly effective — they expose intruders and attract attention. Invest in a basic alarm system; even a noisy siren is a deterrent. Most break-ins are opportunistic — make your home look like a difficult target.
22
Keep gates and doors locked even when at home.
Many home invasions in Nigeria happen during the day when residents are present. Leaving the gate open while cooking, doing laundry, or receiving a neighbor gives intruders easy access. Develop the habit of locking your gate and front door as a default, not just at night. Install a peephole or video doorbell so you can see who's outside without opening the door. The moment you open without knowing who's there is the moment you lose control.
23
Verify identities before allowing unknown persons into your home.
Criminals impersonate NEPA/EKEDC workers, plumbers, police officers, or delivery personnel to gain access. Always ask for identification. Call the company or agency to confirm before letting anyone in. Legitimate service providers will not object to this. If something feels off, trust that instinct. A moment of verification is far better than a home invasion.
24
Maintain good relationships with neighbors and participate in community vigilance.
Your neighbors are your first line of alert. When there's mutual trust, a neighbor who notices something unusual — a strange vehicle parked outside, unfamiliar faces watching your property — will tell you. Join or help form a neighborhood watch group. Share emergency contact numbers within your compound or estate. Community safety is not just about gates and locks — it's about relationships.
25
Report suspicious activities to local security authorities promptly.
If you notice strangers surveilling your street, unregistered vehicles parked repeatedly near your home, or unfamiliar individuals asking questions about your movement patterns, report it immediately to your estate security, community leader, or the nearest police station. Early reports have prevented planned attacks. Don't assume someone else will report it — you may be the only person who noticed.
26
Keep vehicle doors locked and windows raised when driving.
Traffic robberies — "one-chance" attacks and smash-and-grab thefts — are common in Nigerian cities. A locked door and raised window provides critical seconds of delay that can allow you to drive off or attract attention. Avoid leaving valuables visible on seats. When stopped in traffic, keep your phone off your lap and your bag on the floor. Your car is a secure space only if you treat it like one.
27
Avoid stopping unnecessarily in deserted locations.
If your vehicle breaks down in an isolated area, try to move it to the nearest populated, well-lit spot before stopping completely. If you must stop, stay inside with doors locked, turn on your hazard lights, and call for help immediately. Do not accept help from random individuals who stop — contact your roadside assistance, a mechanic you trust, or family. Vulnerability and isolation are a dangerous combination.
28
Refuel vehicles before embarking on long-distance travel.
Running out of fuel on an interstate highway or rural road is a serious security risk, not just an inconvenience. Many incidents occur when stranded motorists are approached by criminals. Always refuel before departure and identify fuel stations along your route. Carry a small reserve fuel container for emergencies. An empty tank creates exactly the kind of vulnerability that makes you a target.
29
Travel in groups when possible in high-risk areas.
There is genuine safety in numbers. Criminals are less likely to target groups than individuals. If you're traveling through a high-risk corridor, coordinate with friends, family, or colleagues so you can convoy. In some communities, government and civil society organizations coordinate convoy schedules for travelers on dangerous routes. A convoy is not an overreaction — it is a rational risk reduction strategy.
30
Maintain a charged phone and power bank during travel.
Your phone is your lifeline during a security incident — for calling for help, sharing location, and accessing emergency services. A dead phone is useless. Carry a power bank rated at 10,000mAh or higher on every long trip. Charge it the night before travel. Avoid draining your phone battery on entertainment during travel; keep it above 50% as much as possible. Communication is your most important tool in an emergency.

Crisis Response & Confrontation

Tips 31–38
31
Avoid confrontations with armed individuals.
This is non-negotiable. Arguing with, insulting, or physically resisting an armed attacker escalates a dangerous situation into a potentially fatal one. No property is worth your life. Your goal is to survive and escape. Comply, observe, and look for an opportunity to get to safety. Even trained security professionals are taught: de-escalate first, resist only as an absolute last resort.
32
Comply calmly if confronted by criminals; prioritize survival over property.
If robbers demand your phone, wallet, car, or jewelry — give it to them. These things can be replaced; your life cannot. Panic, aggression, or sudden movements can cause criminals to respond violently. Keep your hands visible, speak calmly, and follow their instructions. Once they leave, immediately get to safety, report to the police, and contact your bank to block cards. Compliance in a robbery is a survival strategy, not weakness.
33
Memorize key details discreetly if witnessing criminal activity.
If you witness a crime or are a victim, try to memorize: vehicle plate numbers, the number of attackers, their physical descriptions (height, clothing, marks), and the direction they fled. Do not take out your phone to photograph armed criminals — this puts you in danger. Mental notes made calmly are enough to give a useful report to police. You are a witness, not a journalist — stay safe and report accurately afterward.
34
Exercise caution when responding to unsolicited job or travel offers.
Human trafficking in Nigeria often begins with attractive job offers: domestic work abroad, modeling contracts, or well-paying overseas employment. If an offer sounds too good and requires you to hand over your passport or travel documents, or demands upfront payment, it is almost certainly fraudulent or dangerous. Verify any opportunity through official channels before committing. Legitimate employers do not take your documents or ask you to travel without a written contract.
35
Use secure communication channels for sensitive information.
Avoid sending sensitive personal data — NIN, BVN, account numbers, OTPs, passwords — over regular SMS, public Wi-Fi, or unencrypted messaging platforms. Use end-to-end encrypted platforms for sensitive conversations. Be especially careful about communication over public Wi-Fi at airports, hotels, and cafes, where data can be intercepted. The security of your communication directly affects the security of your finances and identity.
36
Avoid carrying all your money in one location.
Split your cash: keep a small amount easily accessible (for small transactions or if you're robbed), and store larger amounts in an inner pocket, money belt, or separate compartment. Never keep all your cards together with all your cash. If your wallet is stolen, you don't want to lose everything at once. Financial distribution is a basic risk management strategy.
37
Be cautious of fake security personnel and unauthorized checkpoints.
Criminal groups sometimes set up fake police or military checkpoints on highways, particularly at night. Signs of a fake checkpoint: no official police vehicles, poorly dressed officers, checkpoints in strange locations, or officers asking for money without giving receipts. If you suspect a checkpoint is fake, drive slowly, keep doors locked, call someone to alert them of your location, and do not hand over your documents or ignition key. Legitimate checkpoints do not demand cash.
38
Remain calm during security incidents and follow instructions from legitimate authorities.
Panic is dangerous. Whether you're caught in a civil disturbance, a police operation, or a robbery, remaining calm helps you think clearly, communicate effectively, and avoid making sudden movements that could be misread. Follow instructions from verified authorities — police, military, or emergency services. If you're unsure whether an authority is legitimate, ask calmly for identification. Calm thinking under pressure is a skill that can save your life.

Digital & Financial Safety

Tips 39–45
39
Refuse participation in bribery, fraud, or illegal schemes.
Participating in corruption — offering bribes, facilitating fraud, or joining illegal schemes — puts you at legal and personal risk. Beyond the ethical problems, people who engage in fraud become targets themselves, either from fellow criminals or law enforcement. The short-term gain is never worth the long-term consequence. Integrity is also a security policy.
40
Request official receipts for all government-related payments.
When paying for any government service — from land documentation to passport fees, court fees to FRSC plates — always request and keep an official receipt. This protects you from being asked to pay twice, proves your compliance, and can be used as evidence if disputes arise. Unofficial payments with no receipts are both legally risky and financially vulnerable. A receipt is your proof of transaction — never leave without one.
41
Report corruption through appropriate official channels.
Nigeria has official anti-corruption bodies: EFCC, ICPC, and the Public Complaints Commission. If you experience extortion, bribery demands, or financial fraud, you can report it. Whistleblower protections exist, though you should take reasonable precautions about your identity when reporting. Communities that report corruption actively become safer over time. Silence enables corruption; reporting disrupts it.
42
Protect personal data from identity theft and scams.
Never share your BVN, NIN, bank OTP, ATM PIN, or account details with anyone — including people claiming to be bank staff. Banks will never ask for your OTP over the phone or by email. Use strong, unique passwords for online banking. Enable two-factor authentication. Regularly check your account statements for unauthorized transactions. Your financial identity is as valuable as cash — guard it accordingly.
43
Be skeptical of investment opportunities promising unrealistic returns.
Ponzi schemes and fraudulent investment platforms have caused enormous financial losses across Nigeria — from MMM to more recent digital schemes. Any platform promising 30–100% monthly returns is almost certainly fraudulent. Before investing anywhere, research the company's registration with the SEC, read independent reviews, and consult a licensed financial advisor. If it sounds too good to be true in Nigeria, it almost always is.
44
Monitor children's online activities and educate them about online predators.
Children and teenagers face real online threats: grooming by predators, cyberbullying, exposure to harmful content, and manipulation into sharing personal information or images. Use parental controls, keep devices in shared family spaces, and maintain open conversations about online safety without creating fear. Teach children that trusted adults should know who they're talking to online. Digital safety education for children is as important as road safety education.
45
Verify emergency fundraising or assistance requests before donating.
Scammers exploit genuine disasters and emergencies — floods, fire outbreaks, medical crises — to solicit fraudulent donations. Before transferring money, verify the account belongs to the person or legitimate organization it claims to represent. Use video calls to confirm identity when possible. Donate through established charities with traceable records. Compassion should be protected by verification, not abandoned for it.

Community Engagement & Emergency Preparedness

Tips 46–50
46
Keep first-aid supplies available at home and in vehicles.
A basic first-aid kit should include: adhesive bandages, antiseptic solution (TCP or Dettol), sterile gauze, pain relievers (Panadol/ibuprofen), disposable gloves, a thermometer, oral rehydration salts, and any personal prescription medications. Keep one at home and a smaller version in your car. In road accidents — which are extremely common in Nigeria — being able to administer basic first aid while waiting for emergency services can be the difference between life and death. A ₦5,000 first-aid kit can save a life.
47
Learn basic first aid and emergency response skills.
Knowing how to apply pressure to a wound, perform CPR, manage a burn, treat shock, or assist someone having a seizure gives you the ability to act when it matters most. The Nigerian Red Cross and St. John's Ambulance offer affordable first aid training in many states. Online resources from the WHO and Red Cross are also freely available. First aid knowledge is one of the most practical gifts you can give yourself and your community.
48
Participate in community security awareness programs.
Many communities, estate associations, and local government areas run security awareness programs, neighborhood watch groups, and safety workshops. Participating makes you more informed, more connected to local security networks, and more capable of helping others. Share safety information with elderly relatives, domestic staff, and neighbors who may not be as digitally connected. An informed community is a safer community.
49
Develop contingency plans for emergencies and evacuations.
Know your exit routes from your home and neighborhood. In flood-prone areas, identify higher ground. In conflict-prone regions, know the direction of the nearest safe state or town. Keep a "go bag" with essentials: copies of documents, cash, medication, a power bank, and a change of clothes. Practice evacuation with your family at least once a year. A plan formed during calm is executed during crisis; a plan formed during crisis is usually not a plan at all.
50
Prioritize prevention, vigilance, and timely reporting to reduce security risks.
Every tip in this guide comes down to one principle: safety is not reactive — it is built consistently through daily habits and community responsibility. The most effective safety measure is the one you practice before anything happens. Stay alert, invest in prevention, speak up when you see danger, and support those around you in doing the same. A safer Nigeria is built one informed, vigilant citizen at a time.
Critical Security Concern

Armed bandits, terrorists, and criminal groups have repeatedly targeted schools across Nigeria — particularly in the North West, North Central, and North East — abducting students, killing teachers, and terrorizing entire communities. From Chibok in 2014 to the Kaduna, Kebbi, and Zamfara school attacks in subsequent years, no school should operate without a security plan. These tips apply to school administrators, parents, teachers, and students alike.

School Safety

Tips 51–58
51
Schools in high-risk areas must establish a direct security link with local military or police.
School principals and administrators in states with active banditry or insurgency — Zamfara, Katsina, Kebbi, Niger, Kaduna, Sokoto, and others — should formally register their school with the nearest military or police base and maintain a direct communication line. Provide the security forces with your school's exact GPS coordinates, student population, and school schedule. Request periodic patrols. An unprotected school in a high-risk zone is not a school — it is a target. Government must be held accountable for protection, but schools must also actively seek it.
52
Install perimeter fencing, controlled entry points, and security checkpoints at school gates.
Physical barriers matter. A school with a single, controlled entry gate — monitored by a guard who records all visitors and vehicles — significantly reduces the ease of a surprise attack. Fencing should be high enough to slow unauthorized entry. Install a visitor logbook, require ID from all non-students, and train gatekeepers on what to look for. Attackers rely on easy access; fencing and gate discipline remove that advantage. Even low-cost measures like metal gates with a padlock procedure make a difference.
53
Conduct regular safety drills so students and teachers know what to do during an attack.
Drills should cover: how to evacuate quickly, where to run, how to find cover, how to signal for help, and what not to do (such as using phones in a way that reveals location or creates noise). Drills should be conducted at least twice a term and treated with the same seriousness as fire drills. Teachers must know the plan — including who is the designated caller to police and parents. A drill done in peace is a life saved in crisis. Children who have practiced remain calmer and make better decisions when real danger arrives.
54
Avoid predictable school schedules and publicizing student movements in high-risk areas.
Bandits and kidnappers frequently conduct reconnaissance before an attack — learning when schools start, when students are in transit, and when security is thinnest. Schools in high-risk areas should vary departure times, avoid announcing events publicly, and coordinate with parents through secure, private channels rather than open WhatsApp groups. Predictability is vulnerability. When attackers can plan around your schedule, you have already lost the first layer of protection.
55
Parents should know their child's school emergency plan and establish a pickup protocol.
Every parent should know: Who will call them if there is an emergency? What is the school's evacuation point? Who is authorized to pick up their child if they cannot reach the school? Establish a family code word that your child knows — an agreed signal that means "come with this person, it is safe." This is especially important in areas where abductors have used impersonation to remove children from school environments. Parent preparedness is a direct extension of school safety.
56
Teach students to recognize warning signs and report suspicious strangers near school.
Students — even young ones — can be trained to recognize and report suspicious behavior: strangers taking photos of the school grounds, unfamiliar motorcycles or vehicles parked consistently near the school gate, individuals asking questions about student schedules, or adults trying to speak privately with children. Create a culture where reporting is encouraged and protected. Students are often the first to notice danger — make sure they know how to report it.
57
Boarding schools in high-risk states should invest in night security, alarms, and emergency lighting.
The majority of mass school abductions in Nigeria have occurred at night — when students are sleeping, guards are fatigued, and the surrounding community is quiet. Boarding schools must have: multiple trained security guards on night rotation, motion-activated lights around dormitories, a functioning alarm system or distress signal, and a direct line to security forces. Dormitory doors should be lockable from inside. Nighttime is when the vulnerability is highest — it is where investment must be deepest.
58
Communities surrounding schools must be active partners in school protection.
In many successful attacks, community members had advance intelligence about suspicious movements — but either didn't report it or reported it too late. Communities should designate trusted individuals who maintain communication between local vigilante groups, school management, and security agencies. Any unusual movement near a school — especially motorcycles, unfamiliar vehicles, or strangers asking about the school — should be reported immediately. A school surrounded by a vigilant community is far harder to attack than one that stands alone.
Critical Security Concern

Churches and mosques across Nigeria have been targeted with bombings, mass shootings, and armed invasions — including the 2022 St. Francis Catholic Church attack in Owo, Ondo State, which killed over 40 worshippers. Attacks during services, when congregations are gathered and focused on worship, have resulted in mass casualties. Every place of worship — regardless of denomination or location — needs a security plan.

Places of Worship Safety

Tips 59–65
59
Every church and mosque must have a trained, visible security team at all services.
Security volunteers or hired guards should be stationed at all entry points during services — not inside the building, but at the gate and at the door. They should be briefed to look for: individuals who enter and exit repeatedly without worshipping, people wearing unusually heavy clothing (concealment), individuals who do not participate in worship but watch the crowd, and unattended bags or objects. A security presence at the door is the single most effective deterrent for an attack of opportunity. Large congregations with significant public profiles should also consider armed private security.
60
Control entry points and screen congregants for weapons and unattended items during high-risk periods.
During festive services — Christmas, Easter, Eid — which draw the largest crowds, entry screening is essential. Use wand metal detectors or hand searches at the gate. All bags should be checked. Unattended bags or vehicles near the compound should be treated as a threat until confirmed otherwise. The discomfort of a brief security check is nothing compared to the alternative. Congregations should be informed in advance and understand that screening is for their protection.
61
Identify and communicate emergency exits to the congregation before every large service.
Just as airlines brief passengers on exits before every flight, church and mosque leaders should periodically remind congregants of all available exits — including side doors, back exits, and windows. In the Owo attack, many lives were lost partly due to the confusion of escape routes in a panicked crowd. Assign ushers to each exit during high-risk services. Knowing where the exits are before you need them is what separates survival from tragedy.
62
Establish a direct communication line between church/mosque leadership and the local police or military.
Religious leaders should have personal phone numbers for the Divisional Police Officer (DPO) and local military commander. Alert them before major services so that patrols can be increased in the area. If you receive a threat — written, verbal, or through social media — report it immediately, even if you are unsure of its credibility. An unreported threat that becomes an attack is a preventable tragedy. Security forces cannot protect what they don't know is at risk.
63
Train ushers and church workers to respond to medical and security emergencies.
Ushers are typically the first to act in any congregational emergency — whether it's a medical episode or a security incident. Train them in basic first aid, crowd management, and the church's emergency protocol. They should know: who to call, how to direct a crowd to exits, where the first aid kit is, and how to communicate discreetly with security staff without creating panic. Prepared ushers are the difference between a coordinated response and a dangerous stampede.
64
Worshippers should trust their instincts — report suspicious people or objects immediately.
If something feels wrong — an unfamiliar individual watching the crowd intensely, an unattended bag under a pew, a vehicle parked unusually close to the entrance with the engine running — report it quietly to a security volunteer or usher immediately. Do not confront the person yourself. Do not assume it is nothing. In many of the attacks on Nigerian places of worship, witnesses later confirmed they noticed something unusual but said nothing. Your instinct exists for a reason — act on it.
65
If an attack occurs during a service, do not freeze — activate your evacuation plan immediately.
In the first seconds of an attack, many people freeze or wait to confirm what is happening. This delay costs lives. The protocol should be simple and drilled: hear gunfire or an explosion — move immediately to the nearest exit, stay low, do not stop to gather belongings, help children and the elderly with you, and do not return to the building. Once outside, move away from the structure, call emergency services (112), and find cover. Practice this with your congregation at least once a year. A congregation that has rehearsed survival behaves very differently from one that has not.

Stay Safe. Stay Aware. Stay Prepared.

Prevention is always better than cure. These 65 tips aren't just rules — they're habits. Start with the ones most relevant to your daily life, share them with the people you care about, and build a culture of safety in your home, school, place of worship, and community.

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