The growing presence of drones, while transforming industries such as agriculture, commerce, and surveillance, has introduced new security and privacy challenges across the globe. In Nigeria, one researcher is taking bold steps to ensure our airspace remains safe and secure.
During the National Digital Security Ambassador Hands-On Workshop held in Jigawa State as part of Cyber Security Awareness Month, Dr. Farouk Lawan shared insights into his latest research breakthrough: an Enhanced Drone Detection Model for Edge Devices.
This model is a significant extension of his 2022 TETFUND National Research Fund (NRF) project, titled DroneGuard, an advanced AI-driven drone intrusion detection system developed to safeguard Nigeria’s airspace from unauthorized drone activity.
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The Innovation Behind the System
Dr. Farouk’s new model introduces a Lightweight Deep Learning-based Drone Detection Model (LDDm-CNN). While traditional drone detection systems demand heavy computational power, this enhanced model is optimized for edge devices, enabling real-time drone detection in environments with limited processing capacity.
By transferring intelligence from a powerful “teacher” model to a smaller “student” model, the system maintains high detection accuracy while minimizing resource consumption, a true breakthrough in lightweight AI innovation.
Why It Matters
As drones become more accessible and versatile, their misuse for illegal surveillance, smuggling, or airspace violations is also rising. DroneGuard’s latest evolution ensures that Nigeria can detect and neutralize such threats early, using homegrown intelligence and engineering talent.
Beyond defense applications, this technology has potential uses in critical infrastructure protection, border security, airport management, and even smart city monitoring.
Inspiring the Next Generation
Addressing participants at the youth-focused cybersecurity workshop, Dr. Farouk emphasized that innovation in digital security should not be limited to global corporations.
“We can build and secure our technologies locally,” he said. “DroneGuard represents how Nigerian researchers can transform global knowledge into indigenous solutions that work for our context.”
A Step Toward National Tech Sovereignty
Dr. Farouk’s work reflects a larger vision, one where Nigeria moves from being a consumer of imported security technologies to becoming a creator of intelligent, AI-powered defense solutions. As digital transformation accelerates, initiatives like DroneGuard will play a pivotal role in protecting Nigeria’s digital and physical sovereignty, while nurturing a generation of innovators capable of tackling tomorrow’s security challenges.

