Criminal networks have turned Nigeria’s telecom towers into open-air warehouses for theft, looting 656 critical power assets across 14 states in 2025 alone and keeping up the pace in early 2026.
The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) data showed the haul included 152 generators and 504 batteries stolen from mobile sites last year.
At the same time, thieves made off with diesel in 1,344 separate incidents and cut fibre cables so often that operators recorded an average of 1,100 fibre cuts every week by late 2025.
The 14 hardest-hit states, Delta, Rivers, Cross Rivers, Akwa Ibom, Ogun, Ondo, Edo, Lagos, Kogi, FCT, Kaduna, Niger, Osun and Kwara, have become the main battlegrounds.
In these places, armed gangs and opportunistic looters regularly raid active sites for anything they can sell: power cables, rectifiers, feeder cables, batteries, solar panels and diesel.
The damage is not slowing. In January and February 2026, thieves stole another 64 batteries and 17 generators. Cable theft jumped to 160 cases in January this year from 74 a year earlier, and 151 cases in February from 73. Diesel theft added 222 more incidents in the same two months.
Gbenga Adebayo, chairman of the Association of Licensed Telecommunications Operators of Nigeria, called the thefts a direct brake on progress. “These are not mere materials. They are the backbone of our digital economy, security systems, and national communications grid,” he added.
Operators have poured money into network upgrades and optimisation after government policy support last year. Yet every stolen generator or cut fibre cable wipes out those gains.
MTN Nigeria, the country’s largest telecom player, revealed it committed up to N1 billion last year to deploy new infrastructure across the country.
The goal: ease rising network congestion, lift service quality and expand capacity to match Nigeria’s fast digital growth.
Yahaya Ibrahim, MTN’s chief technical officer, described the painful contrast. On one side is massive capital injection; on the other, constant infrastructure damage.
Ibrahim told BusinessDay that this dual reality poses serious challenges to Nigeria’s digital transformation.
“We have committed about N1 billion last year to expand and modernise our network. This includes hardware, fibre cables, power systems, and services for executing installations nationwide,” Ibrahim said.
The money targets higher network capacity, upgraded switching centres, wider LTE coverage and relief for crowded urban areas.
Yet the gains are under constant attack. MTN alone faced 397 fibre cuts in May 2025, a sharp jump from a monthly average of just 35 at the end of 2024. “In some countries, you can go a whole year without a single fibre cut. Here, we had nearly 400 in one month. It is completely unsustainable,” Ibrahim lamented.
To stay ahead of the chaos, MTN budgets roughly N7 billion every year just for fibre relocation. “This is money we could be spending on new deployments, but instead we are constantly repairing what was already done,” Ibrahim said.
MTN has built its network with three-route redundancy for switching centres and fibre loops, so traffic can automatically shift when one line fails. The company is also rolling out artificial intelligence and automation for faster fault detection and response.


