Tag: boko haram

  • ‘To secure, we have to love: herdsmen, kidnappers, Boko Haram and the climate of fear’

    Text of a lecture delivered by Chairman, The Nation’s Editorial Board, Sam Omatseye at the Annual lecture of the Faculty of Arts, Ekiti State University, Ado-Ekiti.

    Barely ten years ago, the Nigerian geographic sweep did not weep with bumps or deeps, except the physical ones. When we traversed the country’s landscape, death traps were open to the eyes. They were the Lucifer without spirits. The death traps materialised as craters on highways, sharp, precipitous drops  like cliffs. We know why. They arose from near illiterate survey works, and corruption that deprived some roads of enjoying the full weight of expenditure, according to the budget. They were unmistakable as gullies, unnatural valleys, potholes, sharp bends, erosions, and more. They accounted for fear on the highways. You didn’t have to drive slow, or speed to the death to die. As a character in Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night put it, “care is an enemy to life.”

    Citizens died from collisions. They were of a variety sometimes craved now as the preferred option in a nation of sanguinary compulsions. Car-to car crashes, car-to-crater tragedies, trailers tumbling over fragile sedans, cars or buses sliding on mud-spattered paths into roadside ditches or bushes, or vehicles ramming into trees accidentally felled across the road, and so on.

    A few years back, a certain minister visited the Ore-Benin highway and she staged a rage of public tears. She bewailed the antediluvian atrocity of the structure. Humans – that is fellow citizens – found communion with wounds and fatal finalities on that fabled highway. I am referring to the former minister of oil, then of works, Diezani Allison-Madueke.

    Priests and imams prayed for wayfarers not to encounter death by the demons of bad roads or an ancient infrastructure.

    Today, it is a different story. Those plying some of the roads encounter bumps and deeps, but not just of the roads but of a vital part of their bodies: the heart. It is called palpitation. Death traps do not appear until you know them. Death traps are ghosts or spirits, bearing deaths and kidnapping. The highway menace is now two-fold. We fear the roads, the gullies, the valleys, et al. Now, we fear something infinitely more deadly: the brigand. We now fear and tremble, with bumps and deeps of the heart.

    Ten years ago, in another irony, it was safer when travelling from north to south. The traveller could sleep pacifically in the northern half of the trip, having no premonitions about highway robbers or killers or kidnappers. Now, the fear is more potent in the northern part than in the south. Once the travellers crossed the Middle-belt southwards, and entered such states as Edo, Nasarawa, Kogi etc, the eyes pop out in impotent vigilance. At night, the eyes are owlish. During daylight, the eyes are like owls in daytime. They are wide open but see nothing, until danger, ever lurking, pounces on them from the shadows. It does not pay whether you set out in the morning or at night. The journey will benefit from the prayer of one of Soyinka’s poems, that says, “You must set forth at dawn/ I promise marvels of the holy hour.”

    No holy hours now in the land. Demons frisk about at day, and like in Shakespeare play, Hamlet, “we are doomed for a certain term to walk the night.” The brigands who murdered sleep have murder and rapine awaiting the traveller every hour and at any turn.

    So, where did we get this problem, how did we become a nation that was not contented with the fatalities of the underdevelopment but now embrace the more spiritual, moral fatalities that some have now characterised as herdsmen clashes.

    Some have said it is a problem of ethnic suspicion. Some have chalked it up to poverty. Others said, it is merely the function of porous borders. A few have said it has been coming to us for decades, and the fatal ship only just arrived after a storm-tossed voyage. A few others say we have had religious fervour turned upside down, and that is what we get when we believe because, sooner or later, faith collapses into fanaticism.

    For those who say it is an issue of ethnic suspicion. They have their reasons. For instance, the Muhammadu Buhari administration has done little to project itself as an enclave none other than of tribal irredentists. Appointment after key appointment seems to present him as blindsided by his Fulani fidelity. His Kanuri appointees are seen not as Kanuris at heart but Fulani everywhere except in name and origin.

    But in spite of the outcry, it seems he hears only what his heart tells him. His heart beats only to the rhythm of his northwest origins, according to many of his critics. But it has been a nation of ethnic disloyalty, a fear of Nigeria as a nation. That accounts for why we hide under what the Yoruba call “Tiwa ni tiwa.” Our is ours. Let us recall an interview published in an online publication called The Niche with Professor Anya O. Anya, on the struggle for the June 12 actualisation.

    In the interview, Professor Anya recalled how the Yorubas and the Igbos had a handshake across the Niger, and formed what was known then as the Council of Unity and Understanding. Some of the key players included the great Pa Adekunle Ajasin, Ayo Opadokun, Segun Osoba, Ayo Adebanjo, and others from the southwest. From the east were persons like Ebitu Ukiwe, Professor Anya, and others.  The CUU did not anticipate the turbulence of the June 12 struggle and the maelstrom of the National Democratic Coalition or NADECO struggles.

    The group adopted Chief M.K.O Abiola as their candidate, and Theophilus Danjuma was also drafted into the field to include the Middle-belt. But once crisis hit the organisation, identity politics threatened to paralyse the body. It had happened when the body metamorphosed into NADECO after General Ibrahim Babangida annulled the June 12 polls in 1983.

    But the military had turned fierce and even bloody, clamping down on the media, opposition henchmen, civil society warriors, and students on the rampage. In responding to the annulment, the members of the group wanted to draft a statement to dissociate from the military move to nullify a democracy act. The Yoruba in the group thought that such a statement should include an ultimatum to the military government to reverse its position. The Igbo as well as votaries of the Middle-belt like General Theophilus Danjuma, thought otherwise. They saw such a move as perilous. Here is part of Professor Anya’s account:

    “But something happened that was to transform the nature of the NADECO that was formed. At one of our meetings, it was agreed that a statement should be issued, in that statement, there was one sentence that looked like an ultimatum to the government, I remember that Danjuma asked that the sentence be removed, Ukiwe also said the sentence should be removed and our argument was quite simple: that you are dealing with a military government and an ultimatum to a military government is a declaration of war. If they now decide to take you on, do you have the armament? Have you made the preparations?

    “So unanimously we agreed that the sentence should be removed but one of those things that happens in history, when the statement was published in The Punch, that sentence was still there. Of course, it upset some of us. I knew it upset Ukiwe and Danjuma.

    So, what happened? Why was the statement not expunged as agreed?

    “It turned out that after we had met, three people met again, all Yoruba, and decided that the sentence must be there.

    “I can’t speak for Ukiwe and Danjuma but I speak for myself. For me, it was a dangerous signal because what we were involved in, we were now going into a situation where any of us could be arrested, where it is even possible that any of us could be executed, the least you expect is that those people you are working with you can trust them, that whatever was agreed as our collective wisdom will be obeyed. That was dangerous because it means that you can get into an understanding and you go away doing certain things that was agreed and then the results will be different because some people are doing something else. So it undermined trust.”

    By this account, Professor Anya delineates what he saw as the metamorphosis of NADECO into a predominantly Yoruba force. This is the sort of suspicion that has eaten deep into the fabric of cooperation of the matter. In his recent book titled Battlelines, former Ogun State Governor Segun Osoba referred to the group, but he romanticised its virtues as a model of inter-ethnic harmony. But Anya saw it as a paragon of fear and distrust.

    All our stories of disaffection in Nigeria often start with the story telling. Who controls the narrative? Who is the better spinmeister? It is all about class and tribe and interests. The truth often is a casualty. The political scientist Harold Laski once asserted that “they think differently who live differently.” Those who describe Nigeria as a mere geographical expression find refuge in such episodes. The statement is credited to Chief Obafemi Awolowo, also echoed by one-time foreign minister Okoi Arikpo. But the expression is not original to the great Yoruba sage. The leading European Statesman Count Metternich said Italy was a mere geographical expression in 1814. It comprised a series of principalities occupying a space then known as Italian peninsula. This changed in 1870 when it became a single, harmonious nation.

    So what happened to the Igbo and Yorubas in the CUU that harmony melted into mistrust? It is the story of Nigeria. If we believe Professor Anya’s narrative, what shall we say? Was it that the Yoruba in the group thought the Igbo were cowards and did not understand the peril of June 12? Did the Igbo not understand that you cannot fight the military with kid gloves? Was it what the Yoruba were thinking? Were the Yoruba thinking in line with what Nobel Prize-winning novelist and absurdist philosopher Albert Camus enjoined when he said, “Better to die on one’s feet than to live on one’s knees?”

    If that was the position of the Yoruba, what was the need cohabiting with the Igbo? Why meet if they did not think there was a nexus for any such dialogue? Was it a case of Achebe in Things Fall Apart who turned Okonkwo as a tragic failure, who insisted on dying on his feet and lose rather than Obierika who insisted on living on his knees and compromise and ultimately surrender?

    Were the Igbo not right not to distrust a group that agreed during a meeting but went under cover to portray the wrong conclusions of the meeting? Does that portray the Yoruba in the group as capable of any sort of trust, or what the Yoruba call omoluabi? How, as Professor Anya noted, could the Igbo go into a fight with a person or group who jettisoned agreements. Did the Yoruba think the others were lackadaisical about the cause because Abiola was not their son, and so decided early on to conduct the duel with the military without the emotional or intellectual investment of the other tribes?

    At the bottom of this distrust is our perception of history and identities. So, it is such suspicion that has played out even in the resolution of the problem of resolving banditry in the country. But what is more important in the herders crisis is that it began, according to many analysts, in the ungoverned spaces. According to those who know, it is actually a battle between the Hausas and Fulani. This is a duo that have worked as two peas in a pod for over two centuries. It happened in the Zamfara State area where the Hausa, having been oppressed by the more prosperous Fulani, decided to lash back. It became a case of the Hausa who had since 1804 laboured under the lordship of the Fulani now taking back their pints of blood.

    Again we can also take our minds back to when the issue became a debate between those who wanted the herdsmen everywhere and those who did not care if they remained in the north. The argument was that they should be given ranches. You see, the argument for ranches could have been ordinarily unimpeachable. If the herdsmen had ranches anywhere, they would not wander into people’s farms, they would not have a reason to clash with locals because there would be no locals. But the question is not in the ranches. it is in the ranchers. That is our problem. We trust ranches but not the ranchers. If we don’t trust the ranchers, why would we live with their ranches?

    This takes us to our original sin? Distrust. We cannot work together even if we propound the best of ideas. In Plateau State, the Fulani arrived to the gusto of the natives’ welcoming arms. They were few then and that was decades past. They lived in harmony, but the population of the settlers grew. Then came the era of Ibrahim Babangida. He gave them a local government. They crowned their king, and suddenly, the concept of settler versus natives became a question of even constitutional dimension. They now had electoral legitimacy; they could vote and be voted for with enough numbers to tilt the election results against their hosts.

    Again, ordinarily, if we saw each other as neighbours, what was wrong with a people of so large a population seeking electoral legitimacy? After all, they came with their own culture and historical idiosyncrasies. How could they assimilate if the locals welcomed them while each maintained their individual characteristics?  Each group has their own values they compress to form culture. According to French writer and astronomer, Jerome Lalande,  values “most often represent a transition from facts to rights, from what is desired to what is desirable.”

    Remember this is the same Plateau where the popular Cock Crow at Dawn drama series flourished. The executive producer, Peter Igho, an Urhobo from Delta State, noted that the halcyon days that produced the drama no longer exists today. The same hosts now live in adversarial relationship with their hosts and claim proprietary rights over the landlords. That is what Governor Lalong has undertaken to douse by setting a template of harmony among the groups. To his credit, it has worked for most part, although we cannot rule out the eruptions of fifth columnists from time to time as we have seen.

    So, it was not that the Fulani could not have prospered without let. It was that suspicion grew when hegemonic forces came into play. Hegemony also comes because of a consciousness of a different identity from the host, and vice versa. The distrust of the Fulani by the locals grew because of the sense and perception that they (the Fulani) had grown proprietary wings.

    When the concept of RUGA took centre stage, many in the south said no. RUGA means the same as ranch. But it meant, according to those who know, a village in Fulani. It is a semiotic assault. They – that is the southerners – are not seeing them as merely a ranch but as a Fulani ranch. That killed the concept on arrival. The Plateau State Governor, Simon Lalong, tried to defrock it of its ethnic origin, by saying that a ranch by whatever name is a place where you breed animals for meat. That was clever but the politics of it puts semiotics over reality. Semiotics can also be its own reality.

    Yet there is a strong part of the narrative often downplayed in all these. It is the economic imperative. The herdsmen crisis has been posted as an economic issue. After all, the herders are selling animals, the customers are buying, and money keeps changing hands.

    Its supporters say the herder is not just an economic entity but a cultural one. Herding is their way of life. The herder has an almost ineluctable spiritual connection with the cow. So, the cow is not a totem; it has close to a totemic bond with its owner.

    But the economic factor stands. They have to eat to live to care for their animals. The reason the south has to accommodate the crisis in the first place is that if they hate the herdsmen they still love the cows. They need it for meat, for protein, for the big parties and assurance of a healthy life. They love the meat, if they think the herdsmen mean. If they must beef the seller, they must not beef the beef. Here lies the economic dilemma.

    cont’d – ‘To secure, we have to love: herdsmen, kidnappers, Boko Haram and the climate of fear’

     

  • U.S based Northern Nigerian advocate Calls for release of remaining abducted aide workers

     

    Magnafaith Krimi, a Northern Nigerian community advocate based near Washington, has announced her displeasure and  condemned the murder of an aide worker by Boko Haram militia in Borno State.
    Krimi, in a statement made available to the Press by African Global Center a Non-Profit Organization headquartered in the U.S stated,
    My most heartfelt condolences go to his family, friends and the entire nation.
    Though, mainstream media within the international community rarely report killings of hardworking Nigerian women, men and their helpless children who have been hacked to death in their homes. Some kidnapped, raped, even church folks get shot to death as they leave church after prayer meetings. Just as happened to an abducted member of the Action Against Hunger Team, a Non-Governmental Organization in Borno.
     Suspected radical terrorist, Fulani herdsmen, bandits, kidnappers or in some cases thugs as they are called by various agencies locally and internationally have allegedly been cleansing the north-central states of Nigeria for almost 10 years.
    This tragedy has struck our community again.  Humanitarian, aide workers and medical professionals are not to be counted as victims of conflicts. They sacrifice to bring relief to hurting communities and should never become a statistic of the numbing regularity.
    Scores of women and children have been kidnaped on highways and held captive for days as their loved ones scramble for donations and loan for ransom.
     I am calling for the unconditional release of the remaining members of the Action Against Hunger team still being held captive by the Boko Haram militia.
     She said,
    I am confident that the Nigerian armed forces will ensure the perpetrators are brought to justice. Krimi said in response to the Boko Haram militia released video of the alleged execution of one of the abducted aid workers on Tuesday.
    A  crisis-ridden Nigeria has negative impacts  for international  businesses, in which case the International Committee on Nigeria, enabled a panel of victims from Nigeria to report in congressional offices and to give testimonies to media, members of the U.S. administration, and to think tanks in June to bring awareness to the reality of the  everyday live of a northern citizen of Nigeria.
     Krimi stated that there has to be an awakening of humanity in Nigeria.
     While it is nice to say we must emphasize encouragement and positive solutions within our conflict zones and that yes, we must not give up,
    Krimi ended her text like she did before, You see, my beloved country has a problem with telling the truth about itself. It is indeed a good country. Very good. Yes, so good, it should be better.
  • Air Force strikes terrorists’ gun trucks, neutralises occupants

    The Nigerian Air Force on Thursday said gun trucks belonging to Boko Haram Terrorists have been destroyed through air strikes, while the occupants were also neutralised.

    Its spokesman, Air Commodore Ibikunle Daramola said in a statement that the gun trucks were laden with weapons and heading towards the northern part of Borno state.

    Daramola said “The Air Task Force (ATF) of Operation LAFIYA DOLE has dealt another blow on the Islamic State of West Africa Province (ISWAP) elements by completely destroying an ammunition-laden gun truck and immobilising another one belonging to the group at Garunda in the Northern part of Borno Sate.

    “This was achieved on Thursday, 10 September 2019, when a Nigerian Air Force (NAF) Alpha Jet aircraft on armed reconnaissance mission along the Gudumbali-Zari-Garunda axis spotted 2 ISWAP gun trucks emerging from Jumaacheri settlement heading towards Garunda.

    “The attack aircraft tracked the 2 gun trucks as they attempted to evade detection by driving into foliage.

    Read Also: Air Force jets neutralise insurgents in Borno

    “The aircraft engaged one of the gun trucks, which was camouflaged under a tree, in successive passes scoring accurate hits leading to the neutralization of some of the ISWAP occupants.

    “The gun truck was later seen engulfed in flames as a result of multiple mini-explosions of the on-board ammunition.

    “The other gun truck was also tracked and immobilized after its occupants had abandoned it under another tree in the area.”

     

     

     

  • DHQ slams Human Rights Watch child detention report

    NIGERIA has denied allegations it is detaining thousands of children for suspected links to Islamist militant group Boko Haram.

    A report released by United States-based group Human Rights Watch (HRW) said the children had been held for years in “horrific conditions”.

    The group urged the country to release them.

    But the military described the report as “false”, saying they were treated as “victims of war and not as suspects”.

    While the army does detain women and children they say have been indoctrinated by Boko Haram, the children are “adequately fed, profiled and de-radicalised before their release”.

    The report released on Tuesday, claimed that the military had been arresting and detaining children as young as five “with little or no evidence”. Most are then reportedly transferred to Giwa military barracks in Maiduguri.

    The HRW said the children it interviewed who spent time in the camp described “squalid, severely overcrowded conditions”. None of those 32 children said they had been taken before a court or a judge, and none knew what they had been charged with. None, moreover, said they had had contact with family outside their detention centre.

    Detainees were threatened or even beaten by soldiers, some children said, while soldiers reportedly made advances to female soldiers or took them out of their cells for extended periods. One girl in the report says females in her cell became pregnant during their imprisonment.

    HRW added in the report that it did not know the total number currently in detention. According to UN figures cited in the report, the military took more than 3,600 children between January 2013 and March 2019.

    Read Also: Air Force jets kill scores of Boko Haram terrorists in Borno

    The report praises the release of at least 2,200 children so far, and acknowledges the “important steps” the government has taken to protect children’s rights.

    The HRW called on the authorities to immediately release all the detained minors and to implement a UN protocol ensuring the rapid handover of detained children to protection services, so they can return to their families.

    The Defence Headquarters insisted that “no children are kept and tortured in any detention facility”.

    The Defence Headquarters said while troops were intensifying effort to ensure lasting peace in the North East (NE), Human Rights Watch (HRW) released a report accusing them of arbitrarily detaining children “This report is not only false but capable of undermining the joint efforts of the Armed Forces and other security agencies to restore peace in the northeast.”

    The DHQ added that “no children are kept and tortured in any detention facility. The children caught in the act of terrorism are moved to safe facilities such as the Borno State Rehabilitation Centre in Bulunkutu, Maiduguri, and Operation SAFE CORRIDOR, where they are de-radicalized, rehabilitated and reintegrated into the society. Those whose families could not be traced are handed over to IDP Camps officials for administration.”

    The statement signed by Acting Director, Defence Information Col.  Onyema Nwachukwu explained that :”It must also be noted that several attempts have been made by these sponsored Rights groups to lay allegations of arbitrary arrests and extra judicial killings at the doorstep of the AFN all in an effort to undermine the successes so far recorded in the ongoing Nigeria’s Counter terrorism and Counter insurgency operations against Boko Haram and ISWAP in the North East.

    “Terrorists and insurgents neutralized in combat with troops do not translate to extra judicial killing as erroneously portrayed. The Armed forces do not condone extra judicial killing and erring personnel are sanctioned according to the dictates of the military justice system and the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.”

    The armed forces is a professional military with extant doctrines and Standard Operating procedures, hence, extra judicial killing or summary execution is an aberration and not permissible in our operational engagements.”

     

  • We’ll continue to treat insurgents as bandits – Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari said remnants of Boko Haram in the North-east region of the country are bandits, and they will continue to be treated as such.

    The President spoke Tuesday at State House, Abuja, while receiving Mr. Peter Maurer, President of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

    Buhari, in a statement by the Special Adviser on Media and publicity, Chief Femi Adesina, said “Boko Haram has been degraded, but its members are still a nuisance around Lake Chad and surrounding islands.

    “That is why we are cooperating with Chad, Cameroon, Niger Republic, and other countries. We are also using the Air Force quite effectively. They are bandits, and we will continue to treat them as such.” he said

    The President said the government was concentrating on repairing damaged infrastructure, rehabilitation of internally displaced persons, securing their communities, so that they can return home.

    He applauded the support of the ICRC and other humanitarian organizations, noting: “The situation of the displaced persons is very pathetic. Some children don’t know where their parents are, neither do they know where they come from.

    “We are focusing on education and healthcare, along with rebuilding of infrastructure. The agency formerly under the leadership of Gen. Theophilus Danjuma (retd) and now headed by Major-General Paul Tarfa (retd) is quietly making an impression. We are dedicating lots of resources to the area.”

    Read Also; Buhari, Red Cross President meet in Aso Rock

    President Buhari disclosed that great progress has equally been made in disabusing the minds of people that the insurgency was religious.

    “How can you kill people, and say ‘God is great.’ It’s either you don’t know that God, or you don’t know what you are talking about. God is God of justice. And the people have understood the message well, so recruiting is now difficult for the insurgents,” the President said.

    Mr Maurer said Nigeria was the 5th largest operation of ICRC worldwide, and the organization would continue to render humanitarian action to people affected by violence.

    On the recent killing of two officials in the North-east, he said: “We are shaken by the killing of our staff, but not discouraged. Humanitarian assistance should continue, and we applaud the hospitality of Nigeria.”

    The ICRC President said relationship will be further strengthened with Nigeria, submitting that “the more we see activity from Nigerian authorities, the easier it is for us to add here and there.”

  • Samsung donates to IDPs

    Samsung Heavy Industries Nigeria (SHIN) has donated electrical equipment, clothing and other relief materials to the victims of herdsmen and Boko Haram insurgents’attacks in Jos, Plateau State.

    SHIN’s gesture is coming less than one year after the Korean ship building giant funded eye surgeries for 102 Nigerian patients with cataracts. The patients, who were at the risk of blindness, recovered their eyesight with Vision Care, an organisation under the World Health Organisation (WHO).

    Since 2015, Samsung has worked with Vision Care in the yearly Eye Camp to give free cataract surgeries to individuals who cannot afford the treatment.

    In this latest gesture, SHIN said a missionary group from Korea constructed a school in Jos for the villagers in Rhizha, where four missionaries are teaching about 560 children and also providing counselling to victims, mostly women, suffering from the trauma from Boko Haram insurgents’ attacks.

    As part of its humanitarian assistance, SHIN said it has continually donated to the missionary group for many years and lent a helping hand to the community and its people.

    SHIN said the villagers have suffered from attacks by herdsmen with many losing their family members and livelihoods to these acts of violence. However, these acts of violence have not deterred the missionary from creating this initiative to assist the community.

    The missionary group from Korea has been able to construct a church and a school, while Samsung has donated electrical goods, including television sets, which will be used in the school by the children.

    Samsung has also donated other electrical items for the benefits of the entire community. Items, such as clothing, were also delivered to the villagers.

    In a letter of appreciation to SHIN, a member of the Korean missionary, Jae Seo, said: “I have been working in Nigeria since 1991 as a Korean missionary. Among our works here in Northern Nigeria, one of our joys is that we see a big progress of the children at our school.  At present, we have 88 students and soon on September 25, more students will join us. Our school is still at the baby-stage since it is only three years old. We have hardly any electronic equipment.

    “Thank you for your donation of 10 laptop computers, 10 TVs and 10 refrigerators along with 100 pieces of T-shirts and caps. All of us at EMS Rija Academy say, ‘Thank you so much for your generous donations’.”

  • Onaiyekan, CAN criticise Buhari over killing of priests, insecurity

    PRESIDENT Muhammadu Buhari has again come under fire over recent killings of some Catholic priests and other Nigerians.

    The Catholic Archbishop of Abuja, His Eminence John Cardinal Onaiyekan and the Director of Legal and Public Affairs of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Kwamkur Vondip, expressed concerns over increasing insecurity in the country.

    They especially condemned the high rate of kidnapping in the country.

    The duo, who were reacting to the recent killings of Catholic priests in Enugu and Taraba states, spoke on phone with our correspondent.

    The clerics expressed sadness about the development and faulted government’s method of security operations.

    Onaiyekan urged President Buhari to be strict and use all legal means without fear or favour to end the killings, kidnapping and other criminal activities.

    He said: “The insecurity is getting out of hand and it is affecting everybody. In a way, we can say that we are not surprised that even the priests are not exempted from the general insecurity in the land. It is not as if those hoodlums or the bandits will take their time to make sure that they do not kill a priest. They don’t seem to have any sense of horror about anything.

    “The only thing I can say about this is that my priests are also being killed. It only shows how terrible the situation is. And I must say that I am also sad when we saw President Buhari himself speaking on the issue and insisting that the people responsible for killing the reverend father should be fished out.

    “On one hand, I commended his efforts, and on the other hand, we should ask too that not only the reverend fathers but all those who are killed; those who killed them should be fished out. Everybody’s life is precious and it is given by God. We are praying on this issue and doing our part.

    “Everybody knows what President Buhari should do to stop this menace and I am sure Buhari also knows what to do. There is no excuse because the rate of insecurity we have in our land, no matter under what name, weather it is insurgency of Boko Haram or banditry in the Northwest or herdsmen killings in the Middle Belt or kidnapping, we have never had it so bad.

    “The government should have known that their efforts so far have not yielded adequate results. It is the duty of government to make sure that people are safe in the country. You do not have to be in the opposition to know that. When they themselves are travelling on the road, don’t you see how they protect themselves? They always have armed policemen with them. That is a clear sign that the road is not safe. If the road is safe, would they need so many soldiers and policemen to protect them? If they are using so many soldiers and policemen to protect themselves, what about the rest of us?

    Read Also: PDP knocks Buhari over escalating insecurity

    “The matter is serious and we are not at war. Other nations are tackling their security challenges.”

    Vondip said some highly placed Nigerians were benefitting from the insecurity in the country hence.

    The lawyer said the situation could have been addressed with the budgetary provisions by the government.

    He said if need be, the Service Chiefs, who are not performing, should be sacked by the President.

    Vondip said: “For a nation as big as Nigeria, something is wrong with our security setup. With the kind of leadership we have and what they say on daily basis about their willingness to fight insecurity and crime, you can see that all is not well.

    “My belief is that there is something underneath. There are a lot of compromises, and many of our national leaders know this. Some people are compromising in the same circle. The same people that are meant to protect the people are the ones arranging these killings, just like you saw in Taraba State between the police and the military. That incident should not be taken lightly.

    “My suggestion is that the investigation should go beyond that, beyond what is happening, because a lot of our military men are being killed in the North. Each time the military is embarking on any operation, they will be ambushed. It is not a normal situation.

    “There people that are leaking vital information to cause confusion and their purpose is either they have a project they are fighting for or they are having some financial gains.

    “We have a nation with highly educated people, but you have not found anybody taking time to investigate that there should be an independent opinion on what is happening from security experts. But we seem to be quiet.

    “So, anybody who speaks against it will seem to be speaking against the government, as if we are not living in this country.”

     

  • Borno’s worries

    There are many Nigerians who never believe that we are at war as a nation. Boko Haram, for all its savage flares, rings abstract to them because they don’t know the victims: a dead relative, a maimed neighbour, an embattled home, a razed village, a limp athlete. They hear but do not fear because no gun rattles the next street, nor does a pregnant woman, blood on her face, run half-blind across their terrace.

    But for those who live in Konduga, where buildings lit up recently like a Christmas bonfire with body bags as harvest, war is real. Ditto to Bama where farmers only thrived when they put fear and flight ahead of planting a grain of wheat.

    It reminds one of a history course at the university called The History of the Far East. I asked myself, would those who woke up, fished and died in Cambodia or Japan regard their homes as far? In political science, they regard some wars as low intensity conflict and others as high intensity conflict. If you lose your only home in a hamlet after a scuffle, it cannot make headlines. But it is your own world war three.

    I wonder if, somehow, the war in Borno State is not sliding into a low intensity war in the eyes of those who should win it. As one who has been in that part of the country quite a few times, it gives one cause to worry. Barely four years ago, Lai Mohammed thumped his chest that the war was over and the Buhari administration had turned a national disaster into a fest.

    Today it is a different story, and it has been so for a while. The greatest tragedy is that the nightmare is becoming a routine. The goons attack a village, people die. We mourn. We move on.  Our soldier rolls back a horde of attackers; we celebrate as though the war is over. We move on. Meanwhile, the nightmare aches.

    The information minister shies away from the topic. Even the chief of army staff goofed about the army’s morale as though it was the fault of his soldiers’ faintness of heart.  We cannot underestimate what this does to governance. No one understands this more than the man who is now in charge of running the state. Governor Babagana Zulum was, as commissioner, in charge of reconstructing the state when the army seemed to have retained a grip on the territories. I called him the Marshall Plan commissioner after the United States general who rebuilt Europe from its world war ruins.

    Under the former governor, Kashim Shettima, we saw quite a few episodes of conflict between the centre and state. The governor at that time cried that the Nigerian army was inferior to the insurgents. They were better armed, better organised, and better motivated. At a point, as many will recall, the ragtag mullahs had taken over most of the state. And they loomed within a few miles of the state house. We were on the verge of a first in this country, where a military coup would involve men defiling the Koran, men overthrowing the name of patriotism, and men who did not love their neighbours or pretended to care. Jonathan had no answers and we called him clueless.

    The governor enjoyed a breath of peaceful breadth when the insurgent retreated into a silence. And with Zulum, he embarked a tremendous infrastructure work, with education, agriculture and a slew of many accomplishments.

    But even towards the last embers of Shettima’s reign, the insurgents devised a strategy. They came first with “innocuous” girls blowing themselves up in markets and mosques, and they started to regroup and recruit and excavate resources from shadowy places. Suddenly they built redoubts of terror in bushes and across the borders.

    Enter Zulum, and the war has taken up notches. It must be frustrating to him that he has toured the 27 local governments, and has embarked on an avalanche of activities since May 29. Yet for Zulum, how did it feel that in a feisty place like Konduga where he has constructed a school, distributed food items in IDP camps, built healthcare  and housing units and turned the dry lands into watery boreholes. Then the people had to kneel under the fires of insurgents who laid waste some of the gains. In Bama, he has rehabilitated the technical college, rebuilt its bridges and excavated the Banki town. Yet we know that the goons made forays into the land.

    Whether it is a prominent place like Gwoza, Chibok  and Biu or relatively little known places like Ngala, Dikwa, Mafa  and Bayo, the professor governor’s fingers are at play. But so is the threat of the Boko Haram army. Primary schools, hospitals, water, IDPs, et al, are getting facelifts, but the air of fear ripples in the ear.

    War and development are antipodal, and it is high time that the federal government realised that the first condition to improve the welfare of the people is peace. Yet Governor Zulum, just like his predecessor, has provided funds and equipment and welfare to the army. But who is even accounting for this.

    A source tells this essayist that many people in Borno believe that Borno State may be retreating to the turbulence of 2013 when the state government had to “channel energy to rebuilding more than 30,000 houses, hospitals, shopping malls, local government secretariats, police stations, palaces of traditional rulers. It seems the insurgents are trying to take us back to that era.”

    Such a scenario does not only destroy, it discourages. That is the state of affairs in the first few months of Zulum’s stewardship. President Buhari, who has devoted so much treasure into this battle, should ask for the account books and audit the soldiers. So this war does not become what Obasanjo, with gleeful mischief, prophesies will last many more years. We don’t want the fulfilment of what George Orwell quipped in his novel, 1984, where it states roguishly that “War is peace.” To those who profiteer, isn’t  this a war of peace, while most families faint and fail.

    We don’t want this war. Neither do the soldiers. As Plato noted, “Only the dead have seen the end of a war.” We want our soldiers to see the end of this one.

    Ly(i)on of the tribe

    In Bayelsa, we are seeing the beginning of a temper. But for now, it is within the opposition APC, where Heineken Lokpobiri, who once was a son of the party has turned rogue with the party hierarchs. He was a minister nominated by the same group he is now warring. Biting the finger that fed him? Now Heineken will now have to battle a sober lion, growling ominously for a battle.

    His name David Lyon, a name perceived as a double threat with Biblical implications. Lyon often interpreted as the maned beast, the lion, also is the name of one Europe’s cultural and historical cities, dating back to the warrior age of the Roman Empire. Today it sometimes competes with Paris in France. So, Lyon wants to turn Bayelsa into the city of David as the lion of the tribe.

    Lokpobiri will have to do more than going to court to contest open primaries whose virtues were first sold to the nation in this column by this essayist. The next few days will determine whether Heineken can fight a ly(i)on.

  • APC stalwart tasks Nigerians on collaborative efforts to halt insecurity

    NIGERIANS, irrespective of their tribe, religious and political affiliation, have been enjoined to be team players in curtailing the security challenges that have bedeviled the country in recent times.

    Speaking in Lagos on Saturday, a chieftain of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) in Edo State, Stanley Osifo, said Nigerians themselves are the primary materials needed to fight insecurity.

    Citing the recent happenings in Zamfara and Taraba states, he said the issue of insecurity in Nigeria has gone beyond what ordinary man thinks, saying it beckons on all Nigerians to help government and security agencies in terms of intelligence gathering.

    The Edo State born politician passed vote of confidence on Buhari administration and the security structure in Nigeria given the fact that some local government areas captured by Boko Haram sect in 2015 had been reclaimed.

    He opined that it is unpatriotic on the side of some Nigerians to call on Buhari to remove the current service chiefs for lacking ideas to tackle insecurity ravaging the country.

    He said members of Boko Haram sect dislodged from their main areas of operation, particularly Sambisa forest, could be the same terrorists that found their ways to different parts of the country and are perpetrating all kinds of terrorist attacks in the guise of herdsmen.

    Read Also: APC suspends 3 executives over petition against Gov Fintiri

    The businessman-turned politician gave kudos to Buhari on how his administration has been trying its best in terms of motivating and procuring equipment for the military to curtail terrorism and banditry.

    “The security apparatus that was put up has done its best in curtailing insecurity. As a nation, we should not stigmatise against particular people and we should not because of political affiliation condemn what is good and give credit to what is wrong.

    “Before politics came, we were Nigerians so we should be just in our disposition and embrace patriotism to see how we can work together to make the issue of insecurity a thing of the past,” he counselled.

     

  • Bush insurgency

    It would appear we are faced with bush insurgency. We may have to find escape route by blaming the bushes for the wanton killings and kidnappings that have become regular features on our highways.

    Or how else do we account for the discordant views on whose shoulders to rest the blame for the senseless killings and kidnapping for ransom on our highways perpetrated by faceless elements hiding under the cover of seemingly impenetrable bushes. From Boko Haram insurgency to armed banditry, kidnapping to the insurgency of the herdsmen, all enjoy one common denominator of launching their dastardly and mortal escapades from the bushes.

    Perhaps, with the exception of the Boko Haram insurgents, there has been some difficulty pinpointing precisely those responsible for the killings and kidnappings that have now reduced journeys on our highways to a dreadful enterprise. In the far north, we hear of bandits that raid villages killing people at random and abducting others for ransom. There is also the phenomenon of cattle rusting and the hostilities it engenders; killings associated with illegal mining for gold in Zamfara State and ancillary criminal activities.

    In the Middle Belt states of Plateau, Benue and Taraba, there are killings, sacking and despoliation of communities that are blamed on the herdsmen. Those who perpetrate these dastardly acts also operate under the cover of the bushes and mostly at nights when the indigenous people are asleep. They strike their targets with utmost precision leaving in their trail sorrow and awe.

    The southern parts of the country are home to killings and kidnapping for ransom on the highways, armed robbery, cultism and sundry criminalities. But unlike in the past when armed robbers waylaid their victims, dispossessing them of their money and other valuables, the narrative now is that of well-armed people emerging from the bushes, killing travellers indiscriminately and taking others for ransom. They operate with great speed and precision only to flee into the bushes with the victims who are made to face debasing assault, raping and all manner of cruelty.

    Those who have had the ill-luck of encountering these men of low means say they are Fulani herdsmen. They were fingered in the killing of the daughter of the leader of the Afenifere. Blames traded and sentiments raised on that singular killing are still very fresh in our minds. Pastors of the Redeemed Christian Church of God, RCCG, kidnapped in Ogun State a fortnight ago had similar stories as to those they encountered when taken into the bushes.

    But despite this seeming convergence of views on those largely responsible for the bush insurgency in the southern parts of the country, it would appear no group wants to take responsibility for the criminality. That is why each time killings and kidnapping take place; the police blame bandits for culpability even as the source of the criminality does not seem to be in doubt. The police authorities may be right in their position especially given their inability to get a handle to the rising spate of insecurity on our highways.

    Because of this difficulty, they attribute all criminalities on the highways to bandits whoever they are. Yes, there are armed robbers and kidnappers on the highways who may have nothing to do with cattle breeding. It is also quite possible for the criminal activities of this group to be attributed to the herdsmen. We cannot rule out the possibility that some of them may even disguise as herdsmen to carry out their dastardly activities. This dimension exists.

    Yet, these are not sufficient to exculpate the herdsmen from the accusations levied against them in the rising killings and kidnappings that have reduced travelling on our highways to a nightmare. The fact that other criminals could disguise as herdsmen and commit crimes suggests that something is wrong with the way herding is done in this clime. Apart from the account of those who have encountered these criminals, one thing that reinforces the culpability of the herdsmen is their affinity with the bushes. They live in the bushes; graze their cattle in the bushes and are more familiar with bush terrains even when they are not indigenous to those areas.

    And because they can easily be found in bushes where people dread to enter, they become easy suspects for most of the criminalities coming from there. Moreover, herdsmen are known to be wielding AK-47 riffles against the usual sticks and knives they hitherto used to drive their cattle and for self-protection. It was not for nothing that some governors in the north-east recently passed a resolution to disarm herdsmen and sundry armed groups in the zone.

    Perhaps, if the police had been more efficient in bursting those responsible for the anarchy on our highways, the identity of the masterminds would have been exposed and the nation saved the attendant speculations and altercations. In the absence of that, the various nationalities especially in the south have had to hold herdsmen liable for much of the criminality on our highways. The herdsmen may not be alone in this.  But their affinity with the bushes and the fact that they are found in the remotest parts of dreaded bushes seem to give them out.

    One thing that stands out and very distinctly too, is that we are confronted by the insurgency of the bush. The bush has become our greatest problem; our undoing in effectively protecting lives and property in this country. The bush has become our albatross. It provides cover for all manner of criminalities and has become our greatest challenge. We must confront the bushes with the entire military arsenal at our disposal such that will make it a risky enterprise for any human to hide there and levy war on the rest of us.

    The insurgency of the bush was in action and effective in the Sambisa forest as it nurtured the Boko Haram insurgency in the north-east. For years, that forest was the bastion of the onslaughts of the insurgents against our soldiers. Our soldiers dreaded that forest and have bitter tales on the difficulties it posed in “technically” winning the war on terrorism. That the war is still far from being won, illustrates very poignantly the potent danger the bush has become in the maintenance of law and order.

    We are confronted by the same predicament in the southern parts of the country and the Middle Belt. We must confront the bushes; forests and dislodge all those who hide there to make life difficult for ordinary citizens. We must get to the locations where human activities especially herding is carried out inside the bushes and have effective surveillance over them. With this, it will be easy to determine who exploits the cover of the bushes to make life miserable for the rest of the society. Nigeria is currently gravitating towards unmitigated disaster should the insurgency of the bush be allowed to continue unchecked. There is a grave risk in ignoring the recurring blame trading as to those exploiting their affinity with the bushes to hold others to ransom.

    The way out is to invade the bushes and clear them of undesirable elements. Once our security agencies are able to penetrate the bushes, we will begin to understand the nature of activities that go on there and those responsible for them. If we find the predominance of herdsmen in some of the flashpoints of the killings and kidnappings, then the issue of whom to take the blame would have been largely resolved.

    Where we find other sets of humans inhabiting the bushes, they should be made to account for what business they have there. But if we really want to resolve altercations arising from killings emanating from the bushes, there has to evolve very effective monitoring of the activities of the herdsmen.

    It is time to do away with their itinerant nature; confine them to specific locations where there activities can be effectively monitored. That is the safest way of reducing the tension arising from suspicions that herdsmen are largely responsible for much of the criminalities on our highways. We need total conquering of the bushes such that will make it difficult for the criminal minded to take advantage of their impenetrability to levy war on the rest of us. If it takes confining herders to areas they can be easily monitored or flushing them out of flashpoints of insecurity, so be it.