Who Made Kidnappers? will disturb every reader who truly loves Nigeria. It will compel him or her to ask many questions about what is currently happening in the country, about what the future holds for our younger generation and generations yet to be born. This is because it gives a striking illustration of how a society can dig its own grave by shutting all decent opportunities against the young ones in their formative years. Reading it makes one draw the conclusion that our worst enemies may not be the kidnappers who heartlessly take their fellow Nigerians hostage, hide them somewhere and demand millions of naira as ransom. They do incalculable harm to us and badly tarnish the image of our country. But they may not be our worst enemies. Our worst enemies are the leaders of this country whose greed and insensitivity to the plight of the young ones make it attractive for them to turn to kidnapping as the way to survive or to get rich quick. Our worst enemy is the system that created kidnappers out of our children. Our worst enemies are the political buccaneers and economic pirates who, hiding under the umbrella of leadership, have confiscated all our resources with impunity and have in the process denied the young ones all decent opportunities in their fatherland. Our worst enemies are the baboons in the corridors of power that collect millions of our money on daily basis but have refused to give the monkeys that toil and sweat to sustain the economy the barest minimum to keep them alive. Our worst enemy is a system that permits leadership to become the most lucrative business at the expense of the led. The earlier we accept this bitter reality the better.