Tag: dangerous

  • Dangerous times are here

    We commiserate with friends and families of victims of Monday, April 15, 2014 bombings at Nyanya near the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja. We pray for the full and speedy recovery of the injured and the sick still in various hospitals and health care centres in and around the Federal Capital City of Abuja and others convalescing at home.
    The Progressives Solidarity Forum (PSF) is concerned that the approach of the Federal Government to resolving the Boko Haram crisis does not seem to be effective in resolving the issues surrounding the crisis as the lives lost are now running into thousands. We are worried that this crisis remains protracted even after nearly one-year of emergency rule. The crisis continues to escalate even outside the states that emergency rule has been declared.
    The PSF feels the Presidency and the leadership of the government of the emergency rule states need to work together in a concerted effort to nip in the bud this festering Boko Haram crisis that has now escalated to the Federal Capital Territory. This is not time to play politics. And we would call on the President to show more purposeful leadership and call his spokespersons, the PDP and OlisaMetuh to order.
    The recent war of words and mudslinging between the spokespersons of the PDP and members of the main opposition party, the APC, over the Nyanya bombings and the activities of Boko Haram, especially since May, 2013 when the emergency rule in the three states were declared as totally unnecessary at a time when the leadership and compassion were needed, particularly from the presidency.
    Adamawa State governor, MurtalaNyako, raised some questions about the sincerity of the president and the ineffectiveness of the methods being used by the presidency to control and combat the menace of the terrorist group. The President must answer these pertinent questions.
    What is the point in committing so much cash, hardware and military personnel to a project and then declaring an emergency over an area for nearly one year and yet instead of the problem abating, it escalating and increasing in dimension and sophistication.
    Nigerians would want to know why and how it was so easy for the so-called Boko Haram sect to visit college school girls’ hostel and pick over 200 young innocent girls and drove in convoys of cars and vans across Borno roads that were supposed to be manned by military and police personnel with various checkpoints, unmolested, undetected and without any trace.
    There are many questions Nigerians would want President Goodluck Jonathan to answer aside the insecurity that pervades the country. In particular we demand to know about the following:
    Where is $20 billion? I hope you do understand how far that sum of money could go in addressing the crucial infrastructure deficit plaguing the country; Why was SanusiLamidoSanusi suspended, instead of offering him protection for disclosure of criminality and fraud in NNPC and their related agents? Why are the people suspected to have stolen N2 trillion fuel subsidy funds have not been brought to book? What about those who were involved in the pension fund fraud? And why is it that the Governor of the Central Bank, SanusiLamido was “suspended” to engender “proper investigations” of allegations against his running of the Central Bank of Nigeria? What have you done about the allegation that a minister wasted a whopping N10 billion on private jet charter for her work as well as family and friends?
    Nigerians demand answers to all the questions.
    We also call on the Federal Government and President Jonathan to show good leadership, using all the resources at his disposal as Commander- In- Chief of the Armed Forces and President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria to fulfil the basic responsibility of a government, as enshrined in our constitution, by protecting its citizens and their properties and if a government can’t provide this basic responsibility, then it has no business remaining in government.

    • Emokpaire is the Grand Patron, Progressives Solidarity Forum and the Secretary, All Progressives Congress, UK.

  • Anambra PDP crisis: ‘Jonathan’s silence dangerous’

    •Members threaten to vote for another party

    The crisis rocking the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) in Anambra State has taken a new turn.

    The Chairman of the Fresh Congress Group, Emma Obiorah, said the crisis might force them to vote for another party in the governorship election next month.

    Speaking with The Nation yesterday in Awka, he said the silence by President Goodluck Jonathan means he has a soft spot for another party and not the PDP concerning the November 16 poll.

    Obiorah said the grassroots people were tired of the unresolved issue of the party’s candidature, adding that if President Jonathan had interest in the Anambra PDP, he should break his silence.

    Although the decision concerning the authentic candidate of the party may be taken today, Comrade Tony Nwoye, who the party has declared as its candidate, is unrelenting over the matter.

    His campaign team had visited the nooks and crannies of the state, mobilising support for the former president of the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS).

    Obiorah said: “At this juncture, the national executive of our party should de-emphasise on how to make money out of the crisis. It should think of how to settle this issue so that the party will bounce back for the November 16 election.

    “President Jonathan’s silence on the matter is killing the party the more in the state and this makes us feel that he is trading PDP for another party in the forthcoming governorship poll. We have heard of such moves with another opposition party.

    “If indeed he is interested in the affairs of the party, why has he not summoned a meeting of the leaders to end this crisis?

    “We have decided that if the problems continue, we will come together, I mean our group and decide who we are going to vote for from another party.”

  • Dangerous delusions

    Dangerous delusions

    The year was 1965. Western Nigeria was paralysed by riots, protests and bloodshed.

    The people were up in arms against electoral robbery and political oppression. Trouble started when, just as it is happening in Rivers State today, the Federal Government of Alhaji Tafawa Balewa interfered illegally in the affairs of the region to destabilize the Action Group (AG), incapacitate Chief Obafemi Awolowo, the leader of opposition, and impose an unpopular Chief Ladoke Akintola on the people as Premier.

    Capitalising on a contrived crisis in the Western Region House of Assembly, the Federal Government declared a State of Emergency in the west, appointed an administrator for the region while detaining Chief Obafemi Awolowo and several AG chieftains. The October 1965 regional election in the west was then horrendously rigged to return Chief Akintola to power against the will of the people while Awolowo was put on trial and subsequently sent to prison for alleged treasonable felony.

    Everything was going very well for Akintola and his friends at the centre or so they thought. Balewa was told that the west was burning and he should do something urgently to pacify the people and arrest the situation. The velvet voiced Prime Minister and darling of the western world calmly responded that he could see no smoke in the west.

    On January 15, 1966, the flames got to him. Democracy came crashing down in the country and Nigeria descended into anarchy and ultimately civil war. Balewa, Ahmadu Bello and Akintola had been dangerously deluded. They did not survive the fiasco.

    Fast forward to the Second Republic. Just as is happening today, the President Shehu Shagari administration was pretending that the country was making speedy progress under his lacklustre and utterly visionless, inept leadership. In his 1982 budget presentation to the National Assembly, President Shagari told the lawmakers that “The enumerated setbacks in our economy in 1981 notwithstanding, our GDP has shown a slight improvement…available indicators show an encouraging growth of 15% in the manufacturing sector. There is a 3% rate of growth in the agricultural sector. Furthermore, there are increases in investments. These are, without doubt, expressions of confidence which investors have in the resilience of Nigeria’s economy. This confidence has remained unshaken, despite prophesies of the local forecasters of gloom and doom, who do not know the difference between resilience and buoyancy.”

    The reader can surely see the similarities here between this speech and President Goodluck Jonathan’s mid-term report that suffocated us with statistics indicating that we are all faring very well even as hunger, poverty, disease, joblessness, violence and ignorance stalk the land and public infrastructure lie prostrate across the country.

    The ‘forecasters of gloom and doom’ referred to by President Shagari in the budget speech cited above was none other than Chief Obafemi Awolowo who, in mid-1981 had warned in an open letter to Shagari that the economy was fast approaching a precipice and that urgent steps be taken to salvage the situation. Suggesting several measures that could be taken to safeguard the economy, Awolowo also criticised certain actions taken by Shagari and asked: “Shehu, do you ever ask yourself the question ‘Cui bono’”?

    In a scathing reply, most likely authored by his political adviser, the late Senator Chuba Okadigbo, Shagari told Awo: “My dear Chief, I never ask myself questions in Latin. I only ask myself questions in Hausa or English”. Ah! Those were the days! Shagari’s Economic Adviser, Professor SM Essang addressed an international press conference in London lampooning Awolowo and declaring that the economy was in sound health.

    To cut a long story short, in a matter of months Awo’s prediction came true. The economy was in deep crisis. Eating humble pie, Shagari addressed the National Assembly seeking special permission to introduce austerity measures. I promptly and very urgently threw my high school economics text book authored by Professor Essang, ‘Intermediate Economics’ into the waste bin telling myself, ‘teacher stop teaching me nonsense’!

    That economic crisis signalled the beginning of the end of the second republic. Both Shagari and his economic advisers were dangerously deluded. The second republic did not survive the debacle.

    Fast forward to 2013 Nigeria. The more presidential aides deny such a glaring fact, the more the vast majority of Nigerians are convinced that the Jonathan presidency is bent on destabilizing the Rivers State government and getting the governor, Rotimi Amaechi, out of office at all costs and by all means no matter how foul.

    Having successfully hounded Governor Timpre Sylva of Bayelsa State out of office and imposed Seriake Dickson on the state as governor in a highly militarized election, Jonathan and his inner clique obviously believe they can do the same in Rivers. Amaechi’s sin? He is believed to harbour ambition for higher office in 2015 – an aspiration which Jonathan strategists think can hurt the President’s second term ambition.

    Thus, the police in Rivers State provided security for five members of the 32-member state House of Assembly to sit and attempt impeaching the Speaker illegally but for Amaechi’s timely intervention. The same police looked the other way as a mob attacked four northern governors who paid a solidarity visit to Amaechi in Port Harcourt. Mr Mbu John Mbu, the Rivers State Police commissioner, obviously reading the presidency’s body language, has been openly rude to and disdainful of the governor without rebuke.

    President Jonathan, received the arrow head of the anti-Amaechi forces, the Minister of State for Education, Mr Nyeson Wike, and the five minority members of the House whose violation of the 1999 constitution sparked the recent violence in the legislative chamber, at the presidential Villa in Abuja. This was a tacit recognition by the presidency of Evan BapakayeBipi, who has been absurdly, preposterously and ignominiously parading himself as the Speaker of the Rivers State House of Assembly.

    Dame Patience Jonathan openly told 16 Bishops from the South-South, who visited her in Abuja that Amaechi defied her request that some structures should not be demolished in her hometown, Okrika, and that he removed the Chairman of a local government who held a reception in her honour. Does this not suggest that these are part of the causes of Amaechi’s travails and that the presidency is deeply involved in the Rivers crisis?

    Despite the clear danger that the Rivers crisis portends for democracy in Nigeria, presidential aide, Dr.Doyin Okupe, avers blissfully that all is well. In his words, “The crisis in Rivers State in no way poses any threat to the nation’s democracy. Nigeria remains peaceful and cannot in any way be threatened by political developments in the state…The situation in Rivers State is purely a localized political matter and has no dangerous or far reaching consequences for the peace and security of the nation”.

    This is a very dangerous delusion. Has Dr. Okupe pondered what would happen if Governor Amaechi drops dead today even if of natural causes? Has he considered what would have happened if northerners had retaliated against South-South indigenes in their states for the treatment meted out to their governors in Port Harcourt? Is he not disturbed that an ordinarily taciturn General Abdusalam Abubakar has uncharacteristically come out to warn publicly that the Rivers crisis may torpedo the country’s democracy if not quickly checked? Does he not think that there may be something the General knows that he does not?

    Is Dr Okupe aware that there are currently military task forces operating in at least 28 states in the country – an indication of pervasive instability? This column sincerely hopes that President Jonathan does not share this dangerous delusion. It is heart- warming that the President on Thursday vowed to curb political excesses in the country while receiving the leadership of the Nigeria Bar Association (NBA) at the Presidential Villa. The earlier he does that the better. For, the degeneration of the Rivers crisis may signal the ‘Nunc Dimittis’ of this democracy. God forbid.

  • UK to deport ‘dangerous’ rapist to Nigeria

    UK to deport ‘dangerous’ rapist to Nigeria

    A rapist, who claimed deporting him from the United Kingdom would breach his human rights, Ekene Anoliefo, will be sent home to Nigeria after losing an appeal against the order.

    Mr Justice Blake said the public interest in getting “dangerous sexual predator” Anoliefo, 38, out of the country far outweighed his right to respect for his private life.

    Anoliefo was jailed for 12 years, later reduced to nine, in May 2009 after he was convicted of the brutal rape of a 19-year-old, who he held captive in his car after pretending to help her.

    The Nigerian computing student drove the young woman to his Aberdeen flat, forced her onto a bed and raped her in what the sentencing judge described as “particularly brutal and degrading” circumstances.

    He was ordered for deportation last December and now, after an appeal to the Upper Tribunal, Immigration and Asylum Chamber, has failed in his human rights’ bid to be allowed to stay.

    Anoliefo’s lawyers had argued that he had lawfully lived in the UK for four years as a student and had hoped to be granted indefinite leave to remain once he finished his studies and found a job.

    But rejecting his appeal, Mr Justice Blake said a more substantial private life would need to be shown in a case where someone had not previously had indefinite leave to stay in the country.

    “It is unfortunate that permission to appeal was granted, since this appeal is wholly without merit,” he said.

    “It is obvious that, where a claimant has been convicted of rape and the conviction upheld on appeal, no properly self-directing judge could have done other than to have dismissed the appeal on the basis that the public interest manifestly outweighed it.”

    In sentencing Anoliefo to a 12-year jail term, which was later reduced to nine years, Lord Pentland said: “You are, in my judgment, a dangerous and determined sexual predator who has not the slightest respect for women.”

    Passing sentence at the High Court in Edinburgh, the judge said he had to reflect society’s abhorrence.

    Anoliefo listened through an interpreter as defence QC Donald MacLeod told how he had brought shame on his wealthy family.

    His father is a politician in his local state parliament, the court heard, and had paid for Anoliefo to come to Scotland to study computer technology to prepare him for a career in the Nigerian oil industry.

    Mr MacLeod also told the court that Anoliefo still maintained he was innocent although a jury had found him guilty.

    Lord Pentland said: “You stand convicted of a series of incidents involving the assault, molestation and harassment of six women and a female child in the streets of Aberdeen over a period extending from the autumn of 2007 to the summer of 2008.

    “In addition to these serious offences, you have been convicted of the cruel and degrading rape of a young woman whom you detained against her will in your car after you had pretended to help her late at night.

    “The sentence I impose must reflect the abhorrence that society feels towards persons like you who prey on women in this way and who are willing to resort to violence and rape for their own sexual gratification.”

    He added: “I note that you have not, at any stage, expressed the slightest degree of remorse or empathy for your victims.”

    The judge said he would also recommend a deportation order due to the gravity of the crimes.

    Grampian Police Det Sgt Neil Kennedy, the officer in charge of the investigation, said: “This sentence sends a clear message to those prepared to commit these appalling and cowardly crimes.

    “The witnesses in this case behaved with great courage after being traumatised by these crimes.

    “They will take comfort from the fact that he will be deported at the end of his sentence.”

  • Still playing dangerous politics with Boko Haram

    Still playing dangerous politics with Boko Haram

    For the umpteenth time, President Goodluck Jonathan has seized the opportunity of his attendance at a church service to reassure Nigerians that the end of Boko Haram insurrection in Nigeria is well nigh. This time it was a service on the last Sunday of last year at the Ekklisiya Yan Uwa a Nigeria (EYN), in Abuja, to mark the end of 2012.

    “We are,” he told the congregation, “suppressing the insurgency. For instance, before Christmas, we were told the whole of Abuja will be burned down, including Maiduguri, among others. Though we had some incidents but they were minimised… I assure you the excesses of Boko Haram will be brought to a reasonable control in 2013.”

    I do not know any member of the congregation, much less talk to anyone of them. But I’ll be surprised if the President’s assurances induced anything else but “we’ve-heard-all-this-before” big yawn. After all, have his past assurances not almost always been followed by even worse spate of bombings allegedly by the sect?

    It will be a big pleasant surprise if the President’s assurance makes any difference this time. However, I, for one, have my doubts based on at least three reasons. First, we have a President who seems easily given to hyperbole, at least on Boko Haram. This is a dangerous flaw in anyone’s character, but even more so in a leader, if only because it will invariably lead him to over-react in looking for solutions to a problem.

    The reader will recall how our President once described the sect’s threat as worse than the country’s civil war between 1967 and 1970. This was at the National Christian Centre, Abuja, during the 2011 end of year service. It simply beggars belief that anyone, much less the president of a country who, like our own President, is old enough to have experienced it, can compare the horrors of a full scale war with the effects of any insurrection.

    The President was back again to his hyperbole mode during last year’s end of year service. This time he went beyond our borders to compare the Boko Haram insurgency to the civil war in Syria and to the rebel insurrection in Central African Republic. The wars in those countries, he said, are “akin to what Boko Haram is trying to do in Nigeria, to take over Abuja so as to make me and those in government to go and hide.”

    His comparison of Boko Haram with the CAR rebels is understandable, but isn’t it incredulous that he will compare himself with Syria’s president, Bashar Assad, whom the West and Israel, the main sources of our President’s foreign security advisers in his fight against the sect, regard as the bad guy who should be kicked out of office and out of his country or who, better still, should be dead?

    The second reason I am sceptical about the President’s last assurance that the end of Boko Haram is nigh is his predilection for using churches instead of secular institutions to make pronouncements about the sect. Since last November alone he has used occasions of church events no less than four times to pronounce on the sect, as if Muslims too have not been victims, probably worse, of the sect’s terror. Our President’s apparent preference for churches, as against secular institutions, to speak on this ostensibly religious issue exposes him to suspicions that he is not averse to exploiting religion to divide and rule Nigerians.

    Thirdly, his recent altercation with his erstwhile benefactor, former president, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo – of recent there appears to have been a falling out between the two – over the President’s handling of Boko Haram suggests that, like so many Islamophobes in and out of this country, he believes in one law for terrorism in his part of the country and another for the Muslim North.

    The genesis of the altercation between benefactor and protégé, as we all know, was Chief Obasanjo’s dismissal of the President’s handling of Boko Haram as “tepid” compared to the iron fist with which he said he had handled a similar insurrection by the Movement for the Emancipation of Niger Delta (MEND) in November 1999.

    The former president couldn’t have chosen a more apt occasion to rebuke his protégé; the 40th anniversary celebration in Warri on November 22, last year, of the call of Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor to the ministry. As president of the Christian Association of Nigeria few, if any, have spoken more forcefully than the pastor against any form of accommodation with Boko Haram. To date no president of CAN has been as hawkish as the pastor, not even Dr. Sunday Mbang, the retired Prelate of the Methodist Church, who was once quoted as saying, “Whether they like it or not we will not allow any Muslim to be president of Nigeria. I am declaring this as President of CAN.” (Thisday, July 31, 2000.)

    As if to add salt to an injury, Chief Obasanjo’s belligerent former spokesman, Femi Fani-Kayode, added the gratuitous, and evidently incorrect, rider that Odi effectively destroyed MEND; as several press adverts that seem to have the imprimatur of the Presidency have pointed out, MEND merely went deeper underground after Odi only to return with a vengeance that ultimately forced the Federal Government to negotiate an amnesty for all Niger Delta militants.

    In his own response to the former president, President Jonathan, during his media chat last November, in effect, described Odi as a crime against humanity. When, he said, as then deputy governor of Bayelsa, himself and his boss, Diepriye Alamieyeseagha, visited Odi after the operation ordered by Obasanjo all they found were, “some dead people, mainly old women and also children. None of those militants was killed. None. So the bombardment of Odi was to solve the problem but it never solved it.”

    This raises the logical question of why the President has since persisted in using the same method against Boko Haram insurgency that he has strongly denounced as a crime against humanity. One possible answer is that for the president MEND was “us” but Boko Haram is “them.” Another and related answer is that it is against his political interest for peace to return to the North where opposition to his retention of the presidency in 2015 is likely to be strongest.

    Those, like the President, that insist on a hard-line solution to Boko Haram obviously miss the historical lesson of terrorism, even of the emergence of Boko Haram and of the apparent inability of government to destroy it. Contrary to Obasanjo’s claim of government’s failure to nip the sect in the bud, its massacre in Maiduguri in July, almost ten years to the anniversary of Odi, was predictably worse, if only because Odi is a hamlet compared to Maiduguri as Borno State’s capital.

    It is also telling that when the late President Umar Musa Yar’Adua ordered the army to put the sect down, he boasted that “The operation we have launched now will be an operation that will contain them once and for all.”

    As we are all by now painfully aware, putting down Boko Haram has been anything but a cake-walk. And no one interested in ending its terror will deny the fact that what Amnesty International described at its November 1, 2012 press conference in Abuja as “serious human rights violations carried out by the security forces in response (to Boko Haram), including enforced disappearance, torture, extra-judicial executions, the torching of houses and detention without trial,” will never work.

    Anyone who imagines that it will should take a lesson in the history of terrorism. One good place to start, as I once mentioned on these pages, is a three-page primer on the subject in The Economist of August 20, 2005. As the report pointed out in a comparative history of 19th and 20th century anarchism and contemporary jihad, just like repression did nothing to stop the former it also cannot on its own deter the latter.

    Terrorists, the magazine said in its wise editorial to the West on the subject, “…can be caught, sometimes before they have done anything terrible. That argues for excellent intelligence and police work. Perhaps their numbers can be reduced by ameliorating the grievances that lend them justification for their attacks. That argues for political action. And certainly the public needs re-assurance. That argues for honest explanation – that terrorism does not threaten any western government, that retribution, like police injustices committed in nervous haste, is likely to provoke more violence, that new restrictions are unlikely to bring new safety.”

    None of these three elements – excellent intelligence and police work, political action and honest explanation – exists in President Jonathan’s strategy for bringing an end to Boko Haram terror.

    Instead what we have, as I said on these pages in my longest piece on the subject to date (December 6, 2011), is a government that seems hell-bent on playing dangerous politics with Boko Haram.

     

    Corrections

    Last week’s piece elicited a number of reactions on factual errors it contained along, of course, with many interesting comments. I’d intended to publish them but lacked the space. I’ll do so next week, God willing, along with reactions to the piece before on the 70th birthday of General Muhammadu Buhari, former military head of state and a leading opposition figure.

     

  • Is Boko Haram more dangerous?

    Is Boko Haram more dangerous?

    On November 25, Boko Haram, an Islamist militant group from northern Nigeria, attacked a church in Jaji, Kaduna State, using two suicide bombers during the church’s weekly religious service. The first bomb detonated in a vehicle driven into the church, and the second detonated approximately 10 minutes later, when a crowd of first responders gathered at the scene. About 30 people were killed in the attacks; the second blast caused the majority of the deaths. The incident was particularly symbolic because Jaji is the home of Nigeria’s Armed Forces Command and Staff College, and many of the churchgoers were senior military officers.

    In the wake of the Jaji attacks, media reports quoted human rights groups saying that Boko Haram has killed more people in 2012 than ever before. The group has killed roughly 770 people this year, leading many to conclude that Boko Haram has become more dangerous.

    However, it is important to look beyond the sheer number of fatalities when drawing such conclusions about a group like Boko Haram. Indeed, a less cursory look at the group reveals that while 2012 has been a particularly deadly year, the Nigerian government has curtailed the group’s capabilities. In terms of operational planning, the group has been limited to simple attacks against soft targets in or near its core territory. In other words, Boko Haram remains deadly, but it is actually less capable than it used to be, relegating the group to a limited, regional threat unless this dynamic is somehow altered.

    Boko Haram’s rise

    Boko Haram, Hausa for “Western Education is Sinful,” was established in 2002 in Maiduguri, the capital of Nigeria’s Borno state. It has since spread to several other northern and central Nigerian states. Its official name is “Jama’atu Ahlis Sunna Lidda’awati wal-Jihad,” Arabic for “Group Committed to Propagating the Prophet’s Teachings and Jihad.” While Boko Haram is a relatively new phenomenon, Nigeria has struggled with militant Islamism for decades. For example, the “Maitatsine” sect, led by Mohammed Marwa, fomented violence in the early 1980s in the very same cities that Boko Haram is presently active.

    Initially, Boko Haram incited sectarian violence and attacked Christians with clubs, machetes and small arms. But by 2010, the group had added Molotov cocktails and simple improvised explosive devices to its arsenal. In 2011, Boko Haram made a major operational leap when it unexpectedly began to use large suicide vehicle bombs. They were used first in the botched attack against the national police headquarters in Abuja in June 2011, and they were later used in the more successful attack against a U.N. compound in Abuja in August 2011.

    The leap from simple attacks in Boko Haram’s core areas to sophisticated attacks using large vehicle bombs in the nation’s capital skipped several steps in the normal progression of militant operations. The group’s progression suggested that it had received outside training or assistance. The sudden increase in operational capacity appeared to have corroborated reports circulating at that time of Boko Haram militants attending training camps run by al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb.

    This rapid progression, which came in the wake of a Nigerian operative being involved in al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula’s plot to bomb a Detroit-bound airliner, led to a concern that Boko Haram had the capability and the intent to become the next transnational jihadist franchise capable of threatening the United States and Europe. These fears were further stoked by warnings from the U.S. government in November 2011 that Boko Haram was planning to attack Western hotels in Abuja.

    Dynamic changes

    To counter the perceived growing Boko Haram threat, the Nigerian government, aided by intelligence and training provided by the United States and its European allies, launched a major offensive against the group. Since January, the government has arrested or killed several leaders of Boko Haram, disrupted a number of cells and dismantled numerous bombmaking facilities. In addition to government efforts, there has been a grassroots backlash against Boko Haram, as evidenced by the formation of anti-Boko Haram militant group Jama’atu Ansarul Muslimina Fi Biladis Sudan or “Supporters of Muslims in the Lands of Sudan,” commonly known as Ansaru.

    Is Boko Haram more dangerous than ever?

    Boko Haram has lashed out viciously against these countermeasures. From June to August, the group conducted nine suicide bombings, mostly directed against churches and police or military targets in its home territory. Since August, the operational tempo of its suicide bombings has slowed to about one attack a month. Boko Haram operatives have also conducted a number of armed attacks and non-suicide bombing attacks. Many of these were directed against churches and police or military targets, but several of them were also directed against mosques that denounced Boko Haram. Despite warnings that Boko Haram would target Western hotels in Abuja, the group has not attacked an international target since the U.N. building in August 2011.

    Boko Haram activity has remained heavily concentrated in its core areas with occasional operations in Abuja. There have been only two Boko Haram attacks in Abuja in 2012: a large suicide vehicle bombing attack against a newspaper office in April and a small bombing attack against a nightclub in June. It appears that the group’s ability to conduct large attacks in Abuja has been constrained by government operations.

    Tactically, Boko Haram’s attacks in 2012 have focused almost exclusively on soft targets. Even its attacks against military and police targets have been directed against police on patrol or isolated police stations with little security or have been a target like the church at the military base in Jaji.

    So while Boko Haram progressed rapidly in terms of operational ability in 2011, it is still struggling to conduct sustained operations outside its core geographic territory, and it has yet to successfully strike a hardened target. Even the August 2011 attack against the United Nations, while demonstrating some geographic reach and a focus on an international target, was directed against a relatively soft target instead of a harder target like a government ministry building or a foreign embassy. It is also notable that the group has not conducted an attack in Lagos, Nigeria’s most populous city, or in Niger, Chad or Cameroon, which are all closer to the Boko Haram home territories than Lagos.

    However, in Nigeria, the use of militant proxies has long been part of the political process. Just as Niger Delta politicians have used groups like the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta for their own purposes, politicians in Nigeria’s northeast have supported and used Boko Haram. In fact, an alleged senior member of the group was arrested at the home of a Nigerian senator in Maiduguri in October 2012, and a previous governor of Borno state is allegedly a sponsor of the group.

    This type of political and financial support means that despite the efforts of the central government, the group will not be easily or quickly eradicated. Any serious attempt to curtail the group will require a political solution, which will be highly unlikely during the next two years due to the usefulness of such proxies in the lead-up to Nigerian national elections in early 2015. Therefore, the central government’s options will be limited. The best it can hope for is to continue to pursue the group to contain it and limit its reach and lethality.

    Certainly, Boko Haram retains the capability to kill people, especially in attacks against vulnerable targets on its home turf. But as long as the Nigerian government maintains pressure on the group and as long as the group remains on the defensive, Boko Haram is unlikely to be able to further develop its operational capabilities and pose an existential threat to the Nigerian government — let alone become a transnational terrorist threat.

    Culled from Stratfor

  • Stubbornness is dangerous!

    Stubbornness is dangerous!

    SIR: The signs we see daily tell us that political and economic life of the citizens are at low ebb as majority of the polity are unhappy. By implication, the country should try to avoid an outburst that may affect the cohesion of the country.

    So many mysteries abound in the world and our part of the world is not an exception. There is man’s inhumanity to man. People are being denied justice and equity at will. The gap between the rich and the poor as we used to know get wider by seconds. The rule of law is at a boiling point.

    From 1959 to 1960, the nation passed through serious political problems that in contemporary times are yet to abate. Leadership question have posed serious challenge and this is affecting our development as a nation and as such, we are on the same spot crawling. Also, our economic developments are nothing to write home about.

    So many comments and criticisms have been offered without leading to any where. When our leaders want to criticize themselves they do that either at religious or book launch gatherings even when these have not changed their greedy political perspective in the pursuit of selfish-interests. They still remain politically indiscipline in their attitudes and behaviours.

    In the first Republic, we had three regions and three major political parties that were regionally based. The Northern People’s Congress was based in the North. The Action Group was based in the Western Region, while the National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroon was based in the Eastern Region. During the 1959 Election, none of these 3 political parties had a majority votes to form a government without forming an alliance with the other. The overall majority in the House of Rep at the Race Course then were 312 seats. The NPC had 134, NCNC had 89 while the AG had 73. The AG and the NCNC had a plan to form a coalition but when this move leaked out, the NPC threatened to secede from the Federation, if the Federal Government was based upon the 2 southern parties. So in the end, the NPC and NCNC formed a coalition under the late Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa and the AG became the official opposition party. So many controversies and problems ensued after that.

    When people say we should come together and talk at a round table conference, they are not telling us to talk about our past. Our past is gone. This is a little insight. Our past experiences, as sordid at they were, have brought us to where we were today and with serious implications.

    So there is need to come together to talk about our future for the survival of the nation if we are not deceiving ourselves. Our failure to come together portends danger and serious consequences. It will not be advisable to decide our future with gun and blood again; let us remember that we had fought a bitter civil war that lasted three years and, no nation fights two civil wars and survive. Now is the time to act.

     

    • Prince Adewumi Agunloye,

    Satellite Town, Lagos.