Tag: Shettima

  • Maku trivializing Boko Haram crisis – Shettima

    Maku trivializing Boko Haram crisis – Shettima

    Borno State governor, Kashim Shettima Tuesday lamented what he described as gross misunderstanding of the Boko Haram crisis by those who should be in a position to proffer solution to the crisis, saying the state government has spend over N10 billion naira as counterpart funds since the insurgency began.

    The governor, who spoke at a two -day conference on security and human rights organised by the Centre for Historical Documentation and Research at the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, said it was unfortunate that the Minister of Information, Labaran Maku, was blind to the real crisis of Boko Haram and therefore chose to trivialize it.

    The governor said it was a thing of concern that the nation’s chief spokesman who once served as Supervising Minister of Defence has a shallow understanding of the Boko Haram crisis, adding that “no one might ever know the extent he might have inflicted his poor understanding of the Boko Haram on service chiefs he had to work with.”

    The governor lamented that the insurgents have done so much harm to Islam and have killed thousands of innocent souls in the state.

    He said: If Boko Haram succeeds in overrunning the North East as they seek, they will surely want to extend greater havoc to other parts of the north and if they over run the north, they would want to extend to the south. Crisis of any type has got a life of its own which depends on something for survival.

    “As humans, we depend on oxygen and crisis depends on negligence and this negligence can be in different forms. Negligence can be in form of parents or teachers failing to instill the right habits on children to keep them out of crime; it can be in form of government failing to create and provide jobs to citizens in order to make crime unattractive or government failing to work hard to get the right intelligence at a good time or refusing to act appropriately with the right wares.

    “Book Haram insurgency has drenched our society in blood and systematically, it has been responsible for a creeping destruction of the harmony of communities in huge swathes of Borno State especially, but also in other states of northern Nigeria. The insurgency threatens the order of human and civilised existence and the ability of the state to provide the security and the welfare which Nigerians constitution says is the basis for the existence of the state.

    “Boko Haram slaughters, shoot and crush innocent people, destroy communities and public establishment for the fact that citizens do not share their violent ideology of murder and destructions. To Boko Haram, the life of a Muslim who doesn’t share the sect’s ideology is as condemned as that of a Christian or a traditionalist.”

  • Insurgency: Borno pledges support for FG

    The Borno Government said on Saturday that it was ready to provide all the necessary support to the Federal Government toward ending the Boko Haram insurgency.

    Governor Kashim Shettima made the pledge in Maiduguri while addressing members of the Presidential Fact Finding Committee on the abducted students of the Government Girls’ Secondary School (GGSS), Chibok, Borno.

    Shettima also said the state government would collaborate with the Federal Government to ensure the safe return of the abducted girls.

    He expressed optimism that the committee’s report would provide a leeway toward ending insurgency in the country.

    “Going by the calibre of people in the committee, I believe that the committee will come up with lasting solutions to insurgency in the country.

    “I am glad that you have already interacted with a wide range of stakeholders in your quest to present a credible report.

    “ As for us as political leaders, I want to assure you that we will not politicise the abduction saga.

    “Rather we will like to direct our energy toward restoring peace and rescuing the abducted girls,” the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the governor as saying at the forum.

    Shettima, who described the abduction as a national calamity, also said:

    “We will remain focused and committed to giving the Federal Government all necessary support to bring the insurgency to an end so that our people can live in peace and harmony.

    “We are going to partner with the federal government toward bringing back peace in our country.’’

    Earlier, the Chairman of the committee, Brig.-Gen. Ibrahim Sabo (rtd), said the meeting was part of the committee’s numerous interactions with stakeholders toward identifying the facts of the matter.

    “We have met with a wide range of stakeholders since our arrival in Maiduguri.

    “We had useful interaction with Borno elders, the Chibok community, the GGSS principal, the vice principals, the security guards and other stakeholders,”   Sabo said.

  • Shettima, political terrorism and the Chibok girls

    Shettima, political terrorism and the Chibok girls

    I am writing this exactly 31 days after 234 school girls were abducted and held hostage by a sect that has no modicum of respect for human dignity. And it is not as if the sect’s leader has any either. I can only imagine the psychological trauma that the parents of the abducted girls have been going through since the release of a video in which Abubakar Shekau not only taunted the authorities but also claimed to have forcefully converted the girls to his own version of Islam. Well, Shekau may be having his fun playing god from whatever fortified forest he may have released the video. Yet, one thing is clear, even this cup – heart-rending and scary as it is – will pass over this nation regardless of the crass impotence in high places. What manner of man would wipe off the smiles on the faces of hundreds of parents, throw a whole nation and even the global community into confusion and keep ranting on and on about a sect that treats women as scums? It shouldn’t take anyone a lecture in robotic science to understand that behind this hollow claim to religiosity is a sinister plan to set the country on fire. This is one plot that can never materialise, no matter how many times the agents of terror try to knock the heads of the different faiths in a mortal combat. History is replete with stories of such failures and this won’t be an exception. As the rest of the world joins Nigeria in a world-wide expectation of seeing the abducted girls rescued from the cruel drill they are being made to go through daily in the hands of their tormentors and bring them back to where sanity reigns with genuine love and compassion, there is an urgent need to put an end to the political terrorism sprouting its roots in our midst. Perhaps the Boko Haram sect wouldn’t have grown into this monstrous and sickening criminal gang if those saddled with the responsibility of keeping our land safe had not played politics with every slaughter while, at the same time, living in self-denial that these blood-sucking monsters would soon get tired of dancing on a bloodied canvas. Of course, our pussy-footing only emboldened the killers of our joy to push up the bombings, killings, maiming and slaughtering. Daily, they laugh at our pains, fears and powerlessness. They mock the impotence, sheer cluelessness and laughable shadow-chasing in high places. Interestingly, while terror swaggers through our streets, burrowing its frightening fangs deep into our psyche, those that should save us from this very grim reaper would rather engage in a senseless blame game that has reduced our nation into a contemptible stock. As bombs boomed after bombs and bullets shatter the graveyard peace in the neighbourhood while charred remains of human bodies litter the streets, the tempo of political terrorism continues to grow in leaps and bounds. It is to our collective shame that every national calamity has divided this nation along ethnic, religious and political lines instead of binding us into an indivisible, impenetrable whole. If the opposition All Progressives Congress is not busy trying to make huge political capital out of every national malady, the ruling Peoples Democratic Party would at its best, be oiling its propaganda machinery towards blaming every other person but the inept government at the centre. This cheap yet dangerous politicking thrives while terror takes a firm footing right under our noses. If anything, the abduction of 234 school girls in Chibok has exposed how deep-seated mistrust has crippled the fight against terror. It is now clear to us that the initial lackadaisical attitude put on display by The Presidency three weeks into the national and international outrage which greeted the mass abduction was due to a belief in Abuja that someone must be playing monkey games in Maiduguri. While Shekau had ample time to indoctrinate the girls, Abuja has been busy sitting on its hands, casting a pall of doubts on the veracity of the story. How could the sect member abduct over 200 school girls in a state that is under emergency rule? Why did the principal hand over the girls to insurgents dressed in camouflage? How could they brazenly move the girls in trucks without being seen by the soldiers on duty? Why has no one claimed responsibility for the abduction? Why have the parents not come out on national television to display the photographs of the missing girls so that action can be taken? Why should the Borno State government debunk the claim by the military that 80 of the girls were rescued and returned to their parents a day after the abduction? Why did Governor Kashim Shettima insist that the students should write their exams in Chibok when he could provide adequate security? And then, the dumbest of the questions: was there really any abduction? Awwww! Are we for real? Well, we now know that there was abduction and that some parents have identified their daughters in the troubling video released by Shekau. We also know that these girls are under the command of mean men who have vowed to sell them off, marry them, trade them in exchange for captured insurgents by the federal authorities or station them as human shields in case of any rescue effort. We are also aware that nothing has been said about the fate of the girls who were left out of Shekau’s video and that this could aggravate the mental torture their parents are going through. We’ve always known that, in these dangerous times, we must tread softly and with utmost caution. But is that what we are seeing today? I have never met Shettima before but I must commend him for maintaining his sanity in spite of the barrage of attacks against his person. For a governor who is directly in the line of attack by terrorists, it is intriguing that he has managed to swim through the waters of political terrorism without rocking the boat. His integrity has not only come under sporadic attacks by The Presidency but his loyalty is also being questioned by a military that falls short of accusing him of conniving with terrorists in the abduction saga. Yet, no one has come out with a single proof to suggest that he deliberately handed over our Christian daughters to members of the Boko Haram sect. How come no one is asking questions about our Muslim sisters in that video? Did Shettima also play a part in their abduction? Would he have watched with arms akimbo as terrorists set ablaze the school, murder security men and pack the girls into lorries to begin a life of slavery as it’s being insinuated by some dimwits in Abuja? By the way, is it not shocking that, days after the State Security Service announced the arrest of the masterminds of the Nyanya bombings, the National Publicity Secretary of the PDP, Chief Olisa Metuh, has not deemed it fit to perform the patriotic duty of pointing out any APC card-carrying member among the arrested suspects? He has simply gone numb, moving on to other things. Thankfully too, no one has mentioned Shetimma’s name in what remained the deadliest bombings in the Federal Capital Territory. Even the political terrorists know there is a limit to this charade. Playing the blame or passing the buck simply can’t win this war. In any case, the President is not voted into power so that he or his aides can wring their hands in surrender at every breach of our collective security. He is expected to take decisive action that would put an end to the madness. I’m sorry to say that, in this case, that has not happened. For three clear weeks, he did nothing when he could have galvanised the whole country behind him. I know how difficult it is for the military to accept that Wednesday’s mutiny by some soldiers against their GOC in Borno might be the price the military would have to pay for certain operational mistakes of the past. It does not in any way portend good omen when welltrained soldiers rebel against their commander to the point of firing at his vehicle. It cannot even be an internal affair of the military in this season of anomie. The one that needs to sit up and take control is President Goodluck Jonathan. We understand the need to gain some political mileage ahead of the upcoming 2015 elections. But, like we have said in the past, the time for playing monkey games with the lives of innocent Nigerians is gone. With the attention of the whole world focused on how we go about saving our girls from the criminals holding them captive, we cannot afford any mutiny in the military no matter how ‘insignificant’ some people think the Borno case is. If we allow this to fester, the dire consequences of this should not be lost on those presently terrorising one another with political brigandage. My advice: let them be wary of starting a fire that they may consume all. Enough said!

  • Gov. Shettima declares 3-day fasting for abducted girls

    Gov. Shettima declares 3-day fasting for abducted girls

    Gov. Kashim Shettima of Borno on Friday declared three days of prayers and fasting to seek divine intervention to rescue the more than 200 school girls abducted by insurgents in Chibok.

    The governor made the announcement while addressing members of the Kibaku Area Development Association (KADA), Chibok, who were protesting the abduction of the girls in Maiduguri.

    According to him, the fasting will take place between Monday and Wednesday, May 12 to May 14.

    “We are calling on all Muslims and Christians to embark on a three-day fasting to seek God’s help toward rescuing our girls.

    “All of us must fast because we worship the same God.’’

    “There is no politics or religious issues in this matter because the abduction of the girls is something that should bother us all as parents, uncles and guardians.

    Shettima expressed gratitude to the international community for the concerned shown over the abduction saga, especially the American first lady, Mrs Michelle Obama.

    The governor, who expressed shock that some individuals were expressing doubt over the genuineness of the abduction, said “it is unthinkable for anyone to say such a story could be fabricated.’’

    “We pray that our prayers will be answered and our girls returned safely back home.’’

    Earlier, Mr Alabe Grema, the Spokesman of KADA, had urged the Federal Government to take concrete steps to free the abducted girls.

    He said “my people have been facing psychological trauma following the abduction of the girls.’’

    Grema also presented a letter to Shettima for onward delivery to President Goodluck Jonathan on the issue.

  • Shettima, Sheriff resolve differences

    Borno State Governor Kashim Shettima said yesterday that he has reconciled with his predecessor, Ali Modu Sheriff.

    Shettima spoke in Maiduguri after an All Progressives Congress (APC) meeting in the capital city.

    He said: “I want to announce that we have resolved to bury our differences as a family in the interest of our great party, the APC and the people.

    “The APC is a big family and quarrels or disagreements are inevitable in any human endeavour.

    “I want to assure you that we have decided to bury the hatchet and come together as a team.

    “By the grace of God, this is the last time you will hear of any inter-party squabbles among members of APC in Borno.

    “We may have had hiccups but I can assure you that we have been able to resolve it by burying the hatchet so that we can meet the challenges as a people and as a community.

    “I tell you APC is a big family where quarrels are inevitable but with maturity, we can be at peace with each other. That is why I can report to you now that all is at peace in our ranks.

    “The truth is that we cannot afford to continue to fight endless wars at this critical time of our history, which is why we have applied the principle of consensus for elected positions of our party faithful.

    “Elections will be considered only in the event where consensus is not reached among the stakeholders involved.

    “Borno is a traumatised society on the brink of extinction, which is why we cannot continue the bickering with so many challenges staring us in the face of insurgency.”

    He said all members of the party would form a common front toward winning the 2015 elections.

    Sheriff said the problem was caused by mischief makers who spread rumours among party members.

    “I don’t have any problem with the governor, because I have lots of respect for him.

    “I have never discussed the issue of replacing him as the APC governorship candidate for the 2015 polls as being rumoured.

    “I am a national leader of the party whereas Shettima is the Borno leader of the APC.

    “We do not have any differences here. However, when Shettima becomes governor again, I want him to recognise that he must accommodate every opinion and carry them along. Please note that I have never said that I would dislodge him.

    “I do not need to control the party at the state level because it is not my role,” he said.

    He said a committee had been set up under the leadership of Shettima, to conduct APC congresses in places where the events were marred by crises.

    The governor described a former governorship aspirant, Kashim Imam, as a prophet of peace, who means well for the people.

    Imam, a major stakeholder in the reconciliation, described Sheriff as the founding father of the APC in the state.

    “I tell you we do not have any major difference anymore as far as the state is concerned. If you hear any contrary view; be sure it is coming from Abuja or elsewhere surely not from stakeholders on ground.”

    Present at the meeting were APC Interim Chairman Kaka Yale, Deputy Governor Zanna Mustapha and Acting Commissioner for Information Mohammed Bulama.

    Others are Speaker of the House of Assembly Abdulkarim Lawal, some lawmakers and a women leader, Fatty Kakina.

  • Gov. Shettima reconciles with predecessor

    Gov. Shettima reconciles with predecessor

    Gov. Kashim Shettima of Borno announced on Thursday that he had reconciled with his predecessor, Sen. Ali Modu Sheriff, in the interest of the State and the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Shettima disclosed this shortly after an APC stakeholders meeting they attended in Maiduguri.

    “I want to announce that we have resolved to bury our differences as a family, the interest of our great party, the APC and the people.

    “The APC is a big family and quarrels or disagreements are inevitable in any human endeavour.

    “I want to assure you that we have decided to bury our hatchet and come together as a team from now on.

    “By the grace of God, this is the last time you will hear of any inter party squabbles among members of APC in Borno.’’

    He said all members of the party would form a common front toward winning the 2015 general polls.

    On his part, Sheriff said the problem was caused by mischief makers who spread rumours among the party members.

    “I don’t have any problem with the governor, because I have lots of respect for him.

    “I have never discussed the issue of replacing him as the APC governorship candidate for the 2015 polls as being rumoured.

    “I am a national leader of the party where as Shettima is the Borno leader of the APC.

    “I do not need to control the party at the state level because it is not my role,’’ he said.

    He said that a committee had been set up under the leadership of Shettima, to conduct APC congresses in places where the events were marred by crises.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that disagreement between the two leaders of the party had hindered the conduct of APC ward congress in many parts of the state.

  • Nyako, Gaidam, Shettima reject extension of emergency rule

    Nyako, Gaidam, Shettima reject extension of emergency rule

    Governors of the three states under emergency rule in the Northeast opposed yesterday the attempt to extend the controversial measure.

    The second strand of the emergency rule is expected to end on April 19.

    The Presidency is weighing its options on the “sensitive” matter.

    Besides rejecting the extension of emergency rule, the governors are also asking the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to learn from last week’s general elections in Afghanistan and conduct polls in their states next year.

    The Boko Haram insurgency, has led to thousands of deaths and great hardship in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe.

    To the governors, shelving elections in the three states would amount to succumbing to or conceding victory to the deadly sect.

    They asked INEC to work with the Federal Government to provide adequate security for a free and fair poll in the affected states.

    The governors – Murtala Nyako (Adamawa), Ibrahim Gaidam (Yobe) and Kashim Shettima (Borno) – gave the advice in a joint statement.

    The statement was released through their spokesmen, including Ahmad Sajoh for Nyako, Abdullahi Bego for Gaidam and Isa Gusau for Shettima.

    The governors said: “On the issue of extension of State of Emergency, it is our considered view that there is absolutely no reason to even contemplate an extension of the State of Emergency in any of the three states.

    “It must be noted that a counter insurgency strategy that lasted one year without achieving the desired result requires a redefinition rather than extension.

    “The Federal Government should always remember that it has the obligation of protecting the lives and property of all Nigerians in all parts of the country without necessarily putting them under any special condition.

    “It has the option of putting a security structure in place that can continue and intensify ongoing counter insurgency operations without an extension of emergency rule.”

    They said there had been insurgency in Niger Delta with Joint Military Task Force (JTF) deployed in the region without a state of emergency in place.

    They added: “After all, we had the Joint Military Task Force (JTF) in place in some of States with full military activities prior to the declaration of emergency.

    “We have for many years, also have in place similar JTF in the Niger Delta to combat militancy and kidnapping, we have had same in the southeast to fight armed robbery, we have a Special Task Force in Plateau State combating the crisis in parts of the State without necessarily putting them under emergency rule.

    “Besides, the Nigerian Army has in 2013 created new divisions and brigades in Borno State as permanent military establishments.”

    They expressed confidence that if the military sustained its present level of engagement against Boko Haram, the insurgency will be overcome.

    The statement said: “We hold that with continued motivation, continued and intensified deployment of military resources, the crisis will be overcome.”

    The governors, however, pledged to assist security agencies to restore lasting peace to the three states.

    They said: “We call on citizens in our respective states and other Nigerians to continue to intensify prayers for the return of peace.

    “We call on our security agencies to remain resolute and patriotic. We salute the sacrifices of fallen heroes among them and among our civilians who died in the crisis.

    “We are all very committed and determined to continue to work with security agencies and all other stakeholders in our committed search for lasting peace in our three states.”

    The governors warned INEC against hiding under the guise of insurgency to shelve elections in 2015.

    They said the commission should take a cue from Afghanistan which conducted a successful poll in spite of threats from the Taliban.

    They said: “Afghanistan and its good people were celebrated worldwide for liberating themselves from the scourge of fear and thereby sending a strong signal that no amount of threat would deny them from choosing their leaders through democratic processes. This is the kind of courage expected of genuine patriots.

    “Our Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, should please learn from the landmark election that took place in Afghanistan at the weekend during which election officials took the bold step of going on to conduct election in spite of threats by the Taliban to send the country into extinction if the elections were held.

    “The Central Government in Afghanistan provided adequate security for the conduct of the poles. It was also reported that there was a 53 percent voter turn-out during the elections and it went on peacefully in most places.

    “We all know that the unfortunate insurgency affecting this country has a similar attribute to the Taliban doctrine in Afghanistan even though ours is now assuming a very complicated character.

    “The INEC should, as a matter of counter insurgency approach, ensure that no part of Nigeria is excluded from the 2015 elections on account threats.

    “Suspending elections on account of threats by insurgents and other sundry social miscreants would amount to succumbing to their doctrine and conceding victory on the part of Nigeria.”

    The governors said if INEC opted to shelve or postpone the 2015 poll in the three states, the Boko Haram insurgents will be emboldened to infiltrate other 33 states to scuttle the next general elections.

    The statement said: “Should INEC go ahead with its initially considered exclusion of Adamawa, Yobe and Borno States from the 2015 elections, all criminal gangs need to do, is to extend the attacks to other parts of Nigeria and have more places excluded from future elections. “This will then imply that crime and criminality will be victorious in suspending constitutional democracy in Nigeria.”

  • Jonathan, Nyako and Shettima

    It is of immense interest that some governors from the north-east have been making spirited efforts to exculpate themselves from the raging insurgency in that part of the country. President Jonathan had at the North-east zonal rally of the PDP said, more than anyone else the governors should take responsibility for the reign of terror imposed by Boko Haram in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states.

    For him, it is shameful for a governor who has stayed in office for six years or more to talk of bad leadership when in his state more than 60 per cent of the youths have not even attended primary schools and they are doing nothing about it. In Jonathan’s words, “state governors should be ashamed when our children do not go to primary and secondary schools and they decide to carry arms”.

    Governors’ Murtala Nyako and Kashim Shettima of Adamawa and Borno states respectively have risen to defend themselves of culpability, even remotely, for the raging insurgency.

    Shettima anchored his case on the grounds that he has only stayed in office for barely three years and that Boko Haram insurgency was at its full swing in Borno before he assumed office.

    He argued that the short duration of his regime and the fact that insurgency was thriving before he assumed office were enough reasons why he did not qualify for the blanket blame by Jonathan. This is even the more as he recounted the efforts made by both his administration and the federal government to make Maiduguri safer since he assumed office.

    Shettima may have a point here. And that point is that he has not stayed in office for a long time while insurgency was already thriving in the state before he took over. Therefore, he could neither be largely responsible for the abysmal primary and secondary school enrolment nor the insurgency he met on ground when he assumed office.

    Yet, that is not all there is to the issue. As germane as the issues canvassed by Shettma are, they only succeeded in shifting the blame to his predecessors. Inadvertently, he admitted that governors in states where insurgency has been the order of the day have some blame to share. That is the logical inference from his argument.

    If Shettima’s alibi can be excused, Nyako’s reaction was rather brash and puerile. He would want the blame for the insurgency in the north to be heaped at the doorsteps of the Jonathan regime for what he called poor leadership. According to him, governors cannot be held responsible for the security challenges because they have no control over the security apparatus. He missed the point because he sees the phenomenon only from the prism of curative response rather than prevention. Fighting insurgency through the force of arms is not the matter under reference here. Even then, governors being the chief security officers of their states share vicarious responsibility in it.

    It is obvious from Nyako’s responses that the heuristic value of the issues raised by Jonathan is completely lost on him. By arguing the way he did, he failed to appreciate the role of development in stemming crimes of various hues, including terrorism.

    Yet, he has been in the vanguard of those who have stridently sought to construct a positive correlation between the insurgency in the north and the high level of poverty, unemployment and illiteracy there. It was for the same reasons that agitations for amnesty and the application of the carrot and stick strategy as therapeutic responses to the phenomenon have been severally canvassed by the northern elite.

    Having recognized that poverty is at the root of the quick resort to violence in the north, Nyako could not have convinced anyone when he strove to exculpate his regime from the failure to significantly reduce the phenomenon in Adamawa after nearly eight years in office. If he could not take the blame for not developing his state, it remains a puzzle at what level of governance the blame will be heaped.

    Take the case of primary and secondary school enrolment which Jonathan cited, it will be difficult to imagine how the federal government will take the blame for the inability of the affected states to guarantee access to their indigenes to education at those levels.

    The folly in stretching this argument any further is easily exposed by the disparities in school enrolment between states. By the logic of Nyako, Jonathan should then take the credit for the high school enrolment in some other states of the country. That is the incongruity in pushing the argument any further.

    It is true the policies of the federal authority bear great influence on what happens in the states. Yet, these policies ought to be adopted by other levels of government to suit local peculiarities. But the overall responsibility for the development of the states rests squarely on the shoulders of their respective governors. Neither Nyako, nor Shettima can shy away from that responsibility.

    Ironically, the two were part of the 13 northern governors who met with US officials a couple of weeks back on how to stem Boko Haram insurgency by addressing the socio-economic factors underlying underdevelopment in the north. The import of that engagement is that northern governors must focus more on exploiting local resources to uplift their people from ignorance, disease, hunger and illiteracy which combine to accentuate the quick resort to violence. It is therefore confounding that so soon after that visionary engagement in the US, Nyako still wants to hold the federal government responsible for all there is to insurgency in that part of the country.

    With such a jaundiced mindset, it would appear that not much progress can be made in the fight until his likes come to terms with the high demands of their mandate vis-à-vis the fundamental issues of development raised by Jonathan.

    The central message in Jonathan’s speech is that governors have vital roles in uplifting the standard of living of their constituents. And when this point is internalized and realistically addressed, the objective conditions that accentuate violence will be considerably reduced. That point is unassailable as it has direct links with the massive corruption in public places that has stultified all efforts at development.

    The other value deriving from Jonathan’s contention is to raise the consciousness of the affected states against the culture of heaping blames on the federal government without doing their own part to stem violence through development. Boko Haram rose as a protest against all those directly linked with western education. Ironically, these are people directly or indirectly linked with leadership roles. The original philosophy which was displaced along the line was to stigmatize and overthrow this class of people for the unmitigated liability they had become to society. It is akin to the proletarian revolution as aptly captured by Marx and Engels.

    The northern leadership must identify and redress those social conditions that force the illiterate, the unemployed and innocent but brainwashed youths to take quick resort to violence. This is imperative given the ambivalence or suspected tacit support of sections of the elite for the insurgents. That appears to be Jonathan’s message and it tallies with that which the 13 governors got from their US trip.

  • Boko Haram sect gang of criminals, says Borno Governor Shettima

    Boko Haram sect gang of criminals, says Borno Governor Shettima

    Borno State Governor Kashim Shettima has said it is an insult on Islam to categorise members of the Boko Haram sect as Muslims.

    Shettima, who spoke to our correspondent in Washington DC , United States yesterday, said the insurgents have degenerated into a cult and resorted into extortions and kidnappings to fund their activities.

    He said: “I am strongly of the opinion that the Boko Haram which has degenerated more into a cult, because I believe it’s an insult, am a Muslim, it is an insult on the religion of Islam to categorise them as Muslims.

    “They have degenerated into some sort of a cult , resorting into extortions, kidnappings, and Ibelieve they are funding much of their activities through those barbaric activities. You cannot rule out even their involvement in drugs because they are into anything.

    “They have veered off course; they ‘re more of a gang of criminals, nihilist, of lunatics, hell bent on inflicting pain and destruction on the people.”

    Shettima, who is in the US with other northern governors on the invitation of the United States Institute of Peace for a three-day symposium, said the Boko Haram predates the coming to power of his predecessor, Alhaji Ali Modu Sheriff.

    According to him, Boko Haram insurgency originated in Kanamma village in Yobe State in 2001, when a group of young men went and carved out a territory for themselves and called it an Islamic territory. He said there is a lot of correlation between the poverty that has engulfed the Northeast and the Boko Haram insurgency because the World Bank described the Republic of Chad, the Republic of Niger, and the Daffur region of Sudan as one of the poorest places on earth.

  • ACF to Jonathan: No harm must come to Shettima

    ACF to Jonathan: No harm must come to Shettima

    The new leadership of the Pan northern socio-political organization, Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF), on Wednesday warned that no harm should befall the Borno State governor, Kashim Shettima, over his comment on the strength of soldiers fighting the Boko Haram insurgency in the north eastern part of the country.

    In a statement made available to The Nation in Kaduna and signed by its National Publicity Secretary, Muhammed Ibrahim, the Forum expressed displeasure over President Goodluck Jonathan’s attack on the governor over his comments that Boko Haram members were better armed than the Nigerian Army in the fight against the sect in the state.

    The ACF said that though the government has disowned alleged plan to replace the governor with a Military Administrator, they are compelled to stand by the governor and asked the government to step up campaigns aimed at address insurgency in different parts of the country.

    It noted that the governor was in a better position to tell the world the happenings in the state and scored the Federal Government low on the various security tactics adopted so far to quell the insurgent activities in Borno, Yobe and Adamwa States.

    It said the government should ensure that funds budgeted for equipment and welfare get to the troop engage in the operations.

    The ACF said, “After a careful assessment, the leadership of ACF came to the conclusion that the various security measures taken by the Federal and State Governments, have achieved only limited success so far.

    “What appears more visible to the victims and the suffering public are the plethora of security checkpoints, roadblocks, security cordons and others being mounted by the troops. Sadly, these measures appear to be more effective as avenues for corruption, extortion and maltreatment of civilians than in deterring the activities of the insurgents.

    “Given this grave situation, the sharp reaction of the federal government to the remarks made by Alhaji Kashim Shettima is difficult to understand. The governor was reported to have admonished the country to stop playing ostrich and rise up to the challenges of the day. He had added that we should marshal all resources towards neutralizing and defeating Boko Haram.

    “The governor also praised the efforts of the military given the circumstances in which they find themselves, since according to him, the Boko Haram insurgents are better armed and better motivated than our troops.”