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FCTA Removes 607 Beggars, Mentally Challenged Persons From Abuja Streets

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FCTA Removes 607 Beggars, Mentally Challenged Persons From Abuja Streets

The Federal Capital Territory Administration has taken significant action to address the issue of homelessness and mental health in Abuja, removing a total of 607 individuals, including beggars and those with mental challenges, from the streets since July 2025.

This initiative, conducted by the Operation Sweep Abuja Clean team, was detailed by Mrs. Ukachi Adebayo, the Head of Enforcement at the FCT Social Development Secretariat, during an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria.

Of the 607 individuals removed, 583 were identified as beggars, while 23 were individuals with mental health issues.

The individuals involved in this initiative were provided with counseling and profiling before being returned to their home states.

This process was carried out in collaboration with the relevant state governments through their liaison offices, highlighting a coordinated effort to address the needs of these vulnerable populations.

“What we do when we apprehend the beggars and mentally challenged individuals is to counsel them so as to profile them.

“After that, we take them to their various liaison offices to be returned to their respective states, where they are expected to undergo rehabilitation,” she said.

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Noting that the beggars and mentally challenged persons often return to the streets after evacuation, Adebayo said the operation was ongoing and would continue.

She said, “The more you take them out, the more they resurface.

“Some of them were driven by insecurity in their states and ran to Abuja to take refuge, but we will continue to apprehend them and take them back.”

Similarly, Acting Director of Social Welfare at the SDS, Mrs Gloria Onwuka, said some of the children begging on the streets were brought in from other states by unidentified individuals to beg and hand over the proceeds to them.

Onwuka added that some of the women caught begging with children were not the children’s biological mothers.

“Begging is now run like a business. People will go and hire people’s children from other states, put them in vehicles very early in the morning, come to Abuja and start begging.

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“The families they are hiring these children from don’t even know that this is what their children are being used for.

“We have caught so many of them like that,” she said.

Also, the Secretary of the FCTA Command and Control Centre, Dr Peter Olumuji, explained that Operation Sweep was a joint security operation involving all relevant security agencies and FCT secretariats, departments and agencies.

Olumuji told NAN that the operation was instituted by the FCT Minister, Nyesom Wike, to rid Abuja of miscreants, street beggars, scavengers and other criminal elements.

He pointed out that beggars pose security threats and constitute a nuisance in the city, adding that some of them serve as informants to criminals.

“Not only that, the beggars and mentally challenged individuals also deface the beauty of the capital city, while some of them become victims of kidnapping for rituals and other negative purposes,” he said.

He added that the operation was ongoing and would continue to crack down on beggars, miscreants and other criminal elements wherever they resurfaced.

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NAN recalls that Wike, in October 2024, declared war on beggars defacing Abuja and posing security risks.

The minister explained that the move was necessary over concerns that Abuja was turning into a beggars’ city.

“Let me say clearly now, we have declared war on beggars because Abuja is returning to a beggars’ city.

“If you know you have a sister or a brother who is a beggar on the road, do something, because from next week, we will carry them; we will take them out of the city.

“It is embarrassing that people who come into Abuja, the first thing they see are just beggars on the road,” he said.

Wike further said that some supposed beggars might not be beggars but criminals pretending to be beggars.

“We will not allow that,” he said.

He explained that the move was to ensure maximum security so that residents could sleep with their two eyes closed.

 

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