Tag: Amnesia

  • Herdsmen killings: Between sophistry and amnesia

    MUCH more than any other state in the North, Benue State is the touchstone of the bruising and bloody battle raging between herdsmen and farming communities in Nigeria. If the federal government cannot get the hang of the crisis in that bloodied and now bowed state, it will be hard to see them get it right elsewhere. All the indices of the battle are starkly evident, not in the silhouetted forms that often entrance leisure theorists propounding esoteric reasons from safe distances, but in the brutal, bloody interplay of factors and forces clearly arrayed along political, economic, sectarian and ethnic divides. Virtually everything pertaining to the killings stare the casual observer in the face, offering him an easy comprehension of the issues involved. Why the problem has persisted cannot be unconnected with the deliberate manipulation of these forces, display of primordial prejudices, lack of critical reasoning, and absence of courage.

    During his last trip to Germany, Information minister, Lai Mohammed, suggested to the Nigerian community at a town hall forum in Berlin two Fridays ago that climatological forces working in dissonance with exploding population increases and shrinking resources were more to blame for the clashes drenching Nigeria in blood. He debunked ethno-religious factors as causative agents. He was, however, not reported to have offered any insight into why the government he serves inexplicably thinks the attacks and killings are consequently inevitable. Both the Inspector-General of Police (IGP) Ibrahim Idris and the Defence minister, Mansur Dan Ali, have been quoted as suggesting, in line with what is probably the dominant view in the Muhammadu Buhari presidency, that restriction of grazing routes and enactment of hostile anti-open grazing laws were probably responsible for the clashes and bloodbath.

    It is therefore not illogical to assume that the Buhari presidency views the clashes with a mixture of despondency and helplessness, concluding unwisely, if not naively, that if only Nigerians valued peaceful co-existence and saw the clashes from the exhausted and overstimulated perspective of the president’s inner security council, peace would easily be restored in the troubled states. Worse, the president’s men now seem angry and baffled that most Nigerians do not see eye to eye with the government on both the diagnosis and prognosis of the bloody attacks. In his Berlin talk, the Information minister was obviously reluctant to admit that in a country where dividing lines are sometimes neatly drawn, it is not difficult to see socio-economic crisis morphing dangerously into ethno-religious crisis. The herdsmen are principally Fulani, whether the herders are the owners of the cattle or not, and the farmers are principally not Fulani.

    Nothing, however, stops a government that knows its onions from finding urgent and lasting solutions to any crisis, whether bloody or not, or whether ethno-religious, or socio-economic, or climatalogical. The government’s mindset has been appalling right from the beginning, particularly in their presumption that some crises are either good or more tolerable than others. Unfortunately, too, the government has seemed embattled and bogged down in trying to explain why the herdsmen-farmers clashes are more environmental than anything else, and appearing in the process to neglect the urgent need to proffer sensible and practicable solutions to the crisis.

    If the problem is climatological, as the Information and Defence ministers think, and as the president also obviously suggested rather offhandedly, what practical steps have they taken beyond advocating the reclamation of Lake Chad? Have they not instead advocated the balm of ‘peaceful co-existence’ between farmers and herders without objurgating herdsmen for the forcible possession of other people’s lands? Have they not seemed to give the impression that the onus to engineer the so-called peaceful co-existence lies with farmers rather than herdsmen? The Defence minister was brazenly prejudiced in his analysis of the herdsmen attacks, and the IGP insouciantly dismissed the anti-open grazing laws of some states as insincere and provocative; why is the presidency surprised that many Nigerians suspect that his presidency is neither neutral nor interested in justice in the matter?

    President Buhari’s visit to the bruised and bleeding Taraba State, supposedly to condole with the state and victims of the clashes who number in their hundreds, did not quite end as inspiringly and nobly as many Nigerians hoped. The fault was not that of the victims who craved for succour and uplifting and reassuring words, nor that of the state government which rolled out the red carpet, nor still that of stakeholders who patiently endured their president as he limited his visit to the state capital and, worse, shockingly appeared to embrace only one side of the story and mouth only platitudes. He seemed really to have nothing to say. No, the fault was squarely that of the president. He needed to visit a few distressed settlements or sacked villages — Fulanis and farmers alike — Internally Displaced Camps (IDPs), and speak with understanding to the nature of the crisis and the fairness of the solutions his government had thought through. Instead, he left Tarabans considerably perplexed.

    It was expected that having been roundly criticised for a poor outing in Taraba, the president would, in clear mortification, put up a stellar and deeply empathetic performance in Benue, his next port of call, a state that more or less serves as the undistinguished epicentre of the herdsmen-farmers clashes. Not only was the Benue visit astoundingly brief, probably because of the coincidental visit of the outgoing United States Secretary of State, Rex Tillerson, to Nigeria, it was more remarkable for his inimitable gaffe on the IGP, and his brazen acquiescence to fatalism. The killings in Benue State have since January monopolised headlines, both in terms of their severity and the accompanying dramatic mass burials, at least two of which were widely reported. Having ordered the IGP to relocate to Benue ostensibly to firmly address the crisis, it is bewildering that the president made no follow-up and was not shocked that no abatement accompanied the deployment he ordered.

    It was even worse that the president publicly admitted he thought the IGP had deployed in Benue as he ordered. The order, to be sure, was inadvisable, even imprecise, and shows the emotiveness and lack of painstaking thoroughness that hobble public policy conception and execution in Nigeria, but an order is an order, and ought to be obeyed. Beyond the dramatic vitiation of his authority which the disobedience exemplified, there is also the emblematizing message of the IGP’s action and the president’s unawareness. Benue people distraught over the killings and the unchecked rampage of the herdsmen can be forgiven if they simple assume that the president appeared disinterested in the troubles visited on the state. It is clear to them that despite all the frightening reports from Benue, the president was not asking the IGP pointed and revelatory questions and updates, assuming the subject came up in their interactions. Benue’s disillusionment now seems complete. First was the impatience the president exuded when Benue elders visited him after the January massacre, when he told them to learn to accommodate their fellow countrymen herders. And second is the issue of his seeming disinterestedness, despite his repeated avowals of concern and love. And third is his refusal to indicate a rethinking of the origins of the crisis after the serial misspeaking of the IGP and Defence minister.

    If the president ever gave deep thought to the causes of the herdsmen-farmers clashes, that thought did not seem to have gone beyond the theological fatalism that has corrupted and disennobled public thinking, especially among Nigerian leaders. “The governor and I, and others here, know that we will leave one day,” began the president inelegantly, “but the relationship between farmers and herders will continue. I urge you to keep in touch with them and advise them to live peacefully. Nigeria has over 250 ethnic groups with different cultures and nobody can question God for putting us together.” Quite apart from the fact that his admonitions have become nothing but mere fair words, it is deeply troubling that he seems at bottom to think that the clashes witnessed in Benue and other troubled states appear to question God’s wisdom in putting over 250 ethnic groups together in one country.

    It is a historical fact that the British cobbled Nigeria together in 1914. But even if God inspired it or allowed it, does it imply that injustice must be endured because to fight evil would amount to questioning God? This unfortunate fatalism and generalisation could cloud proper thinking at the highest level of government and occlude any chance of devising appropriate solutions. If God put Nigeria together, did He also inspire the herdsmen attacks, the disgraceful lack of proaction that has seen grazing lands constricted, and the embarrassing inability of Nigerian leaders to acknowledge that new economic models were urgently needed for livestock farming? If God inspired the creation of the Soviet Union, did it amount to questioning Him by fighting its tyrannical disposition and eventually breaking it up? If God inspired the creation of Czechoslovakia, did it amount to questioning Him and throwing his wisdom back at His face when the political elite met and divided the country into two? Did God also put evil in the heart of Adolf Hitler to murder six million Jews, despite the prophetic underpinnings of the recreation of Israel?

    What is clearly evident, as this column has maintained, is that the president is at sixes and sevens over public policy, and his limitations are not helped by his severely limited and insular kitchen cabinet and security advisers. His trips to Plateau, Taraba and Benue have merely exposed those limitations. The upcoming visits to other parts of Nigeria battling with one emergency or the other will simply confirm what is already known about the chasm between what the president’s admirers describe as his honesty and good-naturedness on the one hand, and his evident and dreadful shortcomings in public policy in a complex and modernising polity on the other hand. This was why he admitted his inability to promise the distressed people of Benue anything except when he would return for re-election campaigns.

    There is no anti-grazing law in Kogi State — indeed that state’s giddy and impressionable governor has foolishly welcomed grazing colonies — and Plateau State has openly and cynically forsworn the law. But both states have witnessed herdsmen attacks so severe that it would not be out of order to invite IGP Idris a second time before the Senate to defend his atrocious conviction of the existence of links between anti-grazing laws and herdsmen attacks. What is eminently clear is that as the sophistry in the presidency blooms, and prejudiced public officials and security chiefs submit to amnesia with careless and suicidal disdain, the bloodletting in many parts of the country will continue unabated. More, the killing fields will expand, and soon the government itself will run out of excuses and explanations. But, of course, they will not run out of futile admonitions anchored on their poor theologies and exegeses.

  • Love for selective amnesia

    SIR: “Maybe they were saying chains when we thought it was change”, blurted a certain social media senator, who has made the cyberspace his default “chamber”. And before you could say Jack Robinson, a hashtag, #ChangeToChains, emerged on twitter with various irascible characters jumping on the bandwagon with little or no understanding of what they were saying. Worse still, they could not muster concise and intelligent reason(s) for their anger aside the fact that they just want to be seen as angry.

    What seems to be the cause of their anger in the first instance? Some said there were fuel queues; others said the economy was in comatose etc. Most of the folks pouring expletives actually have conveniently forgotten so soon where we were coming from. As at middle of May 2015, most of the telecommunication companies were sending emails and text messages to their customers appealing to their understanding on why they should expect serious disruption in services due to the twin problems of power failure and lack of petroleum products to run their offsite generators.

    Yes, Nigeria is not yet an Eldorado, sadly so, but while we are not where we ought to be, the truth is that we are not where we used to be. For those screaming economic downturn, I am won’t to ask what economy? We have been a country with no economy aside being the dumping ground of finished goods from China and other countries. While the Asian Tigers are competing on how to be the best in terms of production, privileged elites in Nigeria are competing to outdo one another on consumerism.

    Our shame as a nation reached abysmal levels when we became the butt of jokes of others as it relates to a product that we used to be its sixth largest producer. Petroleum was our major, if not the only product, yet we unashamedly sold it in its raw form, and then spent our hard-earned foreign exchange to import the same product in its refined form, thereby costing us not just several by products but millions of primary and secondary employment.

    Make no mistake about it, the Nigeria that President Buhari inherited was almost a broken entity characterised by dwindling revenue due to the plummeting international crude oil prices, mounting domestic and foreign debt, tumbling foreign reserves and a wicked gang up of supposed leaders who were doing nothing but stealing and looting the country with reckless abandon.

    Recall that when this administration took over, 27 states owed between 5-12 month arrears of salaries of civil servants. Yet, I hear people wailing that the President Buhari has done nothing? Bombs were exploding all over the country like firecrackers, but today we have relative peace and people still think the president is sleeping? Military chiefs saddled with security of our lives and properties are today singing like canaries and confessing to how much they stole individually and collectively, and I still hear some trumpeting that Buhari has done nothing? Over N3 trillion which would have been stolen by have been saved due to strict adherence to TSA yet some say Buhari isn’t doing anything?

    Agreed that Nigeria deserves more than it is getting, but who can build without a foundation? President Buhari is uniquely placed to rebuild Nigeria from the shambolic country he met. But to make Nigeria work for Nigerians, the one they fondly call Mai Gaskiya needs the unalloyed support of the long suffering masses because as John Kenneth Galbraith posits “People of privilege will always risk their complete destruction rather than surrender any material part of their advantage. Intellectual myopia, often called stupidity, is no doubt a reason”.

    • Ayobami Oyalowo,

    Abuja.

  • Nigeria: Before amnesty becomes amnesia

    Nigeria: Before amnesty becomes amnesia

    Had government gone the way of dialogue it should not have been difficult for it  to see the reasonableness of all that Malam Shehu Sani had been saying

    I will, forever, be proud of our web portal: ekitipnupo@yahoogroups.com, an Indigenous Think-Tank and Intellectual Round-Table, agglomerating no less than two thousand Ekiti compatriots, both at home and in the Diaspora and on which no single issue, however supposedly minor, concerning the state, in particular, and Nigeria in general, passes us bye.

    Witness the following remarks by two members of the forum, distinguished Professors in their own right, one of Chemical Engineering, and the other of Agric Economics, on the topic of the moment in Nigeria –Amnesty.

    First: ‘My heart nearly stopped beating yesterday when, listening to local Nigerian news, I heard that the Governor of Abia State was asking for amnesty for the 5000 kidnappers in his state, and that they should be paid compensation or monthly wages “like is being done in the Niger-Delta.”

    5000 kidnappers in Abia State alone? I asked.

    And already identified?

    And it was no April Fool, or an Onion radio station…

    Is this is a sick joke or what? What now does amnesty mean in Nigeria? How do you give amnesty to:

    1. Those who have not accepted that they are criminals that must be “amnestied”?

    2. Those who have not asked for it, even if they accept criminality?

    3. Those whose total number at a point of amnesty you have not identified?

    4. those whose stream of replenishment – after granting some amnesty that must be based on certain terms – you are not able to stem?

    I don’t understand it – ” – but this Orji’s request takes the cake.

    o mebiri emebi, biko nu…’

    And second one, on the same Orji macabre request:

    ‘We are gradually descending from being ridiculous to being insane, playing politics with everything including precious human lives. The logic, as warped as it may appear, is that if the northern leaders are getting money for their Boko Haram (terrorists), he can as well ask for his kidnappers too. After all, terrorism and kidnapping are both crimes and the funds to be used will come from the commonwealth – the theory of ‘whatever is good for the goose should also be good for the gander’.

    Preposterous, I dare say but then, is n’t this our friend of the popular shrine?

    Both quotes point to how serious, or otherwise, a country we are as well as what manner of leaders we have but , more critically, it calls to question our process of leadership recruitment which is as warped as we are rudderless.

    What then is amnesty?

    Generally, amnesty is defined as any governmental pardon for past offenses or crimes, especially political ones. Granting amnesty goes beyond a pardon, in that it forgives the said offense completely. Indeed, a key part of the definition is the fact that amnesty is granted before any trial or conviction so Asari Dokubo could not have been right with his postulation that “the government can only put in two things – exercise prerogative of mercy after a person is convicted or when a person is under trial to put a nolle Prosequi but you cannot see somebody and declare him a criminal and give him a pardon’.

    Amnesty has also been described (Tom Tancredo, for instance, a Colorado, U.S politician, and former Presidential candidate) as a terrible policy, as well as terrible politics because by offering it you are rewarding people for breaking the law.” Please note though, that this unrealistic G.O.P politician had American illegal immigrants in mind.

    Nothing demonstrates the wrongheadedness of President Jonathan’s amnesty offer than the following response by the Boko Haram leader, Abubjakar Shekau: “Surprisingly, the Nigerian government is talking about granting us amnesty. What wrong have we done? On the contrary, it is we that should grant you pardon,” and followed it up by listing what he called the state’s atrocities against Muslims.

    Were the Jonathan government serious, that was the point at which it should have realised that what the problem called for, was dialogue, rather than any sterile offer of amnesty. I have, on this page, been an unrepentant advocate of dialogue even when it was neither trendy nor politically correct to, as much, as mention it. I recently upped the ante by asking for an all-inclusive National conference at which Nigeria’s many demons can be objectively and critically interrogated.

    Had government gone the way of dialogue it should not have been difficult for it to see the reasonableness of all that Malam Shehu Sani had been saying, ad nauseam.

    Shehu Sani, prominent civil rights activist, who single-handedly interacted with Boko Haram up to a point former President Olusegun Obasanjo did not mind joining the chorus, has literally been having a dialogue with the deaf on the issue of Boko Haram. Before he respectfully declined to serve on the Jonathan Amnesty Committee, he had warned endlessly that the first step was to establish a credible link with Boko Haram through those who know the group and who they, in turn can trust. Given the literal ribaldry going on, Sani has ruled out the possibility of Boko Haram leadership accepting the proposed amnesty because you cannot give amnesty to a people who do not want amnesty. Said Sani, “First of all, government set up a committee whose members nobody knows -(that has since been corrected) – but he went on: “If you set up a committee with big people who do not have access to the leadership of Boko Haram, you are simply wasting your time.” He even doubts whether the cheer-leading Northern governors are in touch with Boko Haram at all. The last I remember, personally, were some groveling Northern governors, serving and past, literally on their knees, begging Boko Haram leaders, asking for forgiveness. The manner in which they pleaded, you would have thought they took any of Shekau’s many wives!

    Nor was Sani done. He alleged that the motivating factor in all this talk about amnesty is money –kudi – which some Northern leaders are already eyeing. And he cautioned: ‘the Federal Government must not dangle money before Boko Haram as money cannot solve the problem of Boko Haram. They have not made financial request and secondly they are not fighting because they need money’, he concluded.

    And I say it would be such a shame if these Northern éminence grise have forgotten so soon that, driven by religious fundamentalism, Osama Bin Laden thought nothing of his riches but how to cause maximum damage to humanity. He was known to have spent copious time in the desert where he had work camps and led a totally ascetic life style. How come any government would wish to grant these his ‘evil’ heirs, tonnes of money which would most probably end up in arms procurement and more havoc. (Evil – not my word, but that of respected Alhaji Bamanga Tukur of the Gen Murtala/Nigerian Port Authority fame, a happy throw back to the days Nigeria had leaders.

    The fact that highly regarded Dr Datti Ahmed, President, Sharia Supreme Council in Nigeria has also declined participation in the committee work says much about its reasonableness long term usefulness. Without a doubt this will also go the way of other actions and promises of President Jonathan, and here, power readily comes to mind.

    I will therefore respectfully suggest to Mr President to immediately disband this ill-advised Amnesty Committee, and in its place, commence two quick processes, namely, inaugurate an appropriate committee to commence a discreet dialogue and negotiations with Boko Haram leaders through those individuals they trust, and put in place, a tidy and efficient enumeration of ALL the victims of Boko Haram’s unmitigated terrorism with a view to cogently assisting them or their dependants . Government should also draw up a Marshall plan which will, unlike these loquacious governors, aggressively infuse real socio-economic development in Northern Nigeria which age long feudalism has brought to its knees. The plan should aim directly at tuning the youth around because they constitute the literally rootless, and mostly illiterate, field from which they recruit suicide bombers on the titillating promise of heavenly virgins.

  • Forget amnesty, try amnesia

    Forget amnesty, try amnesia

    Whatever spurts from Goodluck Jonathan’s blood-soaked power canvas is due to crass opportunism.

    He latched on to a “soft” presidency; blissfully forgetting the high folly of plunging your knife into a hippo someone else had hunted down. It is bound to cause life-threatening, if not life-claiming, diarrhoea!

    But the man of suspect luck is not the only culprit. No less guilty are his godfathers who conspired to vault him beyond his competence.

    Guiltier still, than these opportunistic political godfathers, are the giddy executors of Jonathan’s much-vaunted pan-Nigeria mandate of Southern Nigeria and the Middle Belt. In the ultra-reckless electoral ardour of the moment, they blithely proclaimed: we vote Goodluck, not PDP!

    Now, Goodluck is bad dream; and PDP no less a nightmare. There is no waking up from both!

    It is endgame, indeed, in self-induced political perdition! Welcome, poor souls, to the desert of slaughter, where Boko Haram is evil lord and master!

    In the rising appeasement hubbub, Boko Haram has declared it needed no one’s amnesty because it did no wrong! On the contrary, it was Its Murderous Majesty that must be begged to pardon the Nigerian state which, it claimed, had been wronging Muslims! Talk of the tail wagging the dog!

    But perhaps that would chasten the vocal minority, which stamps its often insensible holler with high wisdom; and dubs the dignified silence of the quiet majority as quintessential folly.

    But wait a minute! Where is Malam Adamu Ciroma? While everyone was betide themselves to make Jonathan president at all costs – let the heavens fall! – Malam Ciroma it was that maintained that dire warning: there would be consequences!

    Now before your fecund imaginations start linking the good malam with political Boko Haram, which Goodluck Jonathan has claimed is his major traducer, think hard and straight. Boko Haram might be the most explosive of President Jonathan’s many disasters. But it is not the worst.

    With absolutely no idea what to do with power, but straining every sinew to keep himself in the presidential saddle, the man of good luck brings with him multi-layered bad luck that would continue to haunt the country, even after he, and his nemesis, Boko Haram, would have become bad history.

    That Boko Haram may well score the double of being Nigeria’s nemesis as well should open the eyes of those who can’t see beyond a present power racketeering: that the House of Lugard is crumbling; and that, if care is not taken, there might soon be no territory over which to grab power and loot resources!

    Chronic, programmed and systemic underdevelopment is the wages of presidential incompetence. And Jonathan, with all due respect to his person and due reverence to his high office, is gold standard of that incompetence.

    Sure, Jonathan is not the first of these presidential incompetents. But when a presidential undertaker acts as though he had the latitude of the very first of those whose cumulative misdeeds have brought this country to this sorry pass, then the alarm bells must start clanging!

    That lack of rigour defines Jonathan’s flip-flops on Boko Haram; and allowing himself to be muscled into granting amnesty to a deranged and blood-thirsty band.

    Boko Haram is too deranged to recognise its all-too-obvious lunacy, talk less of showing penance and atoning for its high crime against millions of innocent Nigerians: in lost lives, hacked limbs and permanently shattered psyche!

    Indeed, what President Jonathan needs right now is amnesia, not amnesty. Amnesia would completely blot out all past crimes, no matter how wilful or heinous; and prepare the state for even more heinous future crimes, assured that future amnesties would wipe out future crimes, until the sick joke collapses in a heap!

    To start with, amnesia helps the president to forget, with bliss, that the impunity of his own rigged emergence, against his party’s zoning policy, may have birthed the so-called political Boko Haram.

    If indeed there is political Boko Haram, and it and its religious evil-twin had not been clobbered to seek a soft landing, why should they, for “amnesty”, hand over their ace to their writhing victims; taking a part when then could take the whole? And then what: cohabitate with Jonathan as they erect their beloved Islamic republic? Please!

    Whichever way you look at it, amnesty for now is a no-brainer. But the impasse that has forced it thunders a dire warning to future players in power and impunity: powerless is power acquired by dodge!

    Still, not even amnesia can excuse the shallow linkage between amnesty for Niger Delta militants and the one being proposed for Boko Haram.

    Turai Yar’adua has proffered a simplistic, exchange-is-no-robbery theory: her late maigida had granted amnesty to Jonathan’s creek anarchists. Why couldn’t Jonathan, court to court, just return the favour, to the militants’ Sahel cousins-in-terror? Jonathan, Hajia Turai seems to cry, bring this feudal transaction to closure!

    Gen. Muhammadu Buhari has also chipped in his own bit: amnesty for Boko Haram, as anything that can promote peace, should be encouraged. What of justice, the first condition for sustainable peace?

    Still, the Niger Delta case was different from Boko Haram, aside from the fact that the militants basically targeted oil-pipelines in the creeks, while Boko Haram killed with venom a defenceless urban population, even if there is clear criminality in both campaigns.

    But the most important difference: at amnesty time, the Niger Delta militants had been clobbered enough that the terror party seemed over; and the creek boys badly needed some soft landing; which their political leaders secured, in exchange for the free flow of crude.

    Boko Haram is different: a murderous, cocky, boastful and implacable foe, still flexing muscles and daring the state. What does anyone gain by granting such dogma-stoned anarchists amnesty – to turn the crumbled House of Lugard into the Taliban theocratic republic of their sick dreams?

    Jonathan and his traducers had better wake up. Nigeria, as structurally constituted, is close to end times. Restructuring for development is therefore the key. It is a stark reality: restructure or perish!

    After six years of blood and gore, Jonathan should take a bow, and quit his eternal scheming for power, even when it is clear he cannot add any value. He should therefore perish any thought of running in 2015.

    But his recommended exit does not obviate Nigeria’s structural debacle; which has made the country a developmental grave. So, whoever takes over from him, who blissfully forgets about this structural challenge, only plays with fire.

    That is why Jonathan must table concrete proposals on political and economic restructuring to give this polity a rebirth; and also propose a Nigerian Marshall Plan for the impoverished North East, which basically produces the wretched of the earth that sign up for Boko Haram and its evil campaign.

    Restructuring, along productive federal lines, would stop future Jonathans from seizing poisoned chalices coated with power; and condemning the rest of Nigerians to bloody trouble.

    That’s what the country needs – not some amnesty powered by amnesia!

  • Amnesia or amnesty?

    Amnesia or amnesty?

    I do not think anybody ever doubted that the federal government would, at some point, surrender to the artful manoeuvres of the Boko Haram terrorists and their hordes of sympathisers. I had predicted that it was only a matter of time before the federal government went for the old template of appeasement now described as amnesty.

    Well, that moment seems to have come, finally. On Monday last week, the sect declared a unilateral ‘ceasefire’ after a reported closed door meeting with the Borno State Governor, Alhaji Kashim Shettima and his top officials as well as religious leaders from the state.

    The commander-in-charge of North and Central Borno, Sheikh Abu Mohammad Abdulazeez Ibn Idris, who briefed the media shortly after the meeting stated that the group had agreed to lay down their arms and embrace peace after due consultation with the leader of the sect, Sheikh Abubakar Shekau, as well as intervention and pleading from respected individuals and groups in the state.

    There was also a proviso that government immediately release all their members from custody unconditionally, rebuild their places of worship, and compensate them. And as proof that the group still retained a shred of humanity, its leader would not just acknowledge but was actually quoted as lamenting that “a lot of Muslim women and children have suffered”! Really?

    Quite expectedly, it was the moment for the weary, frustrated and increasingly out-of-depth but policy-challenged federal government to swing in into frenzy. On Saturday, Vice President Namadi Sambo sneaked into Maiduguri, the Borno State capital – the first by any high official of the Jonathan presidency and perhaps the federal government since the insurgency blew into full scale terror in 2009. Earlier the pacifist Borno Elders Forum had latched on the ceasefire offer to demand that federal government accept the offer, perhaps without preconditions! The group leader and elder-statesman, Shettima Ali Mongunno was unusually ecstatic: “we expect that they (the federal government) will embrace this positive opening and capitalise on it in order to open wider space for sustainable peace”.

    Victory at last? Well, I hope.

    At this point, it seems necessary to look at the prognosis – possibly the events that have made ceasefire suddenly attractive. First, so-called war has become un-winnable in the increasing unlikelihood that the federal government will accede to the demand by the Borno Elders Forum to pull back the forces of the military Joint Task Force anytime soon. Second, the Boko Haram’s tactics, by now familiar, are such that Nigerians are far less disposed to accord them further psychological advantage that they once enjoyed. The third point is that the developments in Mali and the foul mood it has spawned in the international community has made the unilateral offer of ceasefire not only pragmatic but inevitable.

    Having said that however, the ceasefire offer seems to me the first of a two-part play. The first part involves the use of the template– the mechanism which apart from excusing the government of the rigour of multi-level engagement that had long been canvassed, fits snugly into the culture of trading peace for cash. The other half of the package is the push for blanket pardon for the class of mass murderers.

    I must say that the latter, when it finally happens as I am sure it will, can only take the nation to a new depth of low even by Nigeria’s bizarre standards of public policy and morality. Yes, Nigeria continues to sink on virtually all indices of human development. It seems to me really, a different kind of call for a self-respecting government to be asked to sit at communion table with terrorists for some payout negotiations.

    In case the federal government pretends not to know, there is a world of difference between the Niger Delta militancy and the variant of terror unleashed by the Boko Haram. At least we knew what the Niger Delta militants wanted. Theirs was a quest to control the resources beneath their soil. Their main target was the oil industry infrastructure and different classes of actors in the oil industry chain. Kidnapping and other forms of terror were merely deployed in furtherance of their objectives. That obviously explains why it was fairly easy to draw the gangs from the creeks into the open with promises of amnesty and other goodies. It is therefore given that the current peace will hold for as long as the flow of goodies to ex-militants is not disrupted or threatened.

    But the atavistic Boko Haram? How do you place a maniacal group which seeks rewards of multiple score virgins only in heaven’s tableland? Ship them to a colony of delectable virgins where they can have their heart’s content?

    Has anyone considered the difficulties in reconciling the long term demands of the sect with those of a modern, secular, self-respecting and orderly society? Do we then surrender to the crazy demand for a theocratic space within the polity without altering the notion of sovereignty as we know it?

    And the fundamentalist ideology which feeds the insurgency? What chance does the federal government have to extirpate it? Or is the current quest merely about purchasing peace at all costs?

    What happens 10, 15, 20 years from now? Where does one begin the discussion on accommodation for the crime of mass murder?

    Let’s look at what the group is putting on the table in the so-called ceasefire. They want their members released from custody – unconditionally. In other words, for the federal government to overlook the grievous crimes committed against the state. Note that the crime here is mass murder. Also, the group wants their places of worship rebuilt. They want compensation for their members. I hear the figure of N26 billion has been proposed.

    To the group and their cohorts, injury to victims and their relations, not to talk of the larger society, counts for pretty little. No, the lives of innocent citizens, many of them women and children, gruesomely terminated in their places of worship do not matter. The scores of religious houses brought down by their lethal bombs obviously means nothing? For Boko Haram and their sympathisers, justice is akin to living in mortal dread of their terror.

    Still want to ask what I think of the ceasefire business? Amnesia would seem to me as by far, more preferable. That way, we won’t have to worry about ever calling anybody to account for crimes against humanity, or contemptible aversion for basic universal standards of justice and humanity.

    By all means, let’s have the amnesty – a comprehensive one at that – for all manners of crimes under the sun. After all, isn’t it said that all have sinned?

    As for when the nation would rise up to say ‘no more’, I don’t think we are there yet. At least, not now or in the foreseeable future.