NIGERIA is bleeding and convulsing
in pain throes. She is gradually sliding into the impotence of error. Her
efforts at steadying the tottering steps – even if on the slimy blood of the
innocent victims quartered in death by the Boko Haram suicides – appears
vacuumed of effect.
Since the emergence of the terrorist
group, Nigeria has lost innocent thousands of her population. Among those
wasted by the unsparing bombs of the suicides are youths of productive
age. The blood spillers – who have variously made asinine demands –
believe that inflicting maximum carnage on the nation would compel her to
acquiescence. And they have carried on with defiance, and spoken with supercilious
condescension. Every day presages some bizarre occurrence.
The resurgence of violence in the
last couple of days shows that an end to the carnage may not be in sight yet.
After the trail of blood from Buni Yadi, through Maiduguri to Mainok, the number
of recorded dead stood at about 300. It was a dark day for Nigeria and a
doomsday for the families of the violently dispatched. Life has lost its
meaning as death is adrift, seizing men in their hundreds. It could not be
worse. Vanguard newspaper in its comment on Thursday, March 6,
2014 observed that, “It is tiresome keeping track of the killings in the North
East”.
The killing fields of the North East
now overflow with the blood of innocent Nigerians. Nigerians have reason to be
angry. But to do so upon indictment of the Jonathan administrationwill be a
great disservice to the government, and an absolution of the political
leadership of the area under siege.
Truth is that the terrorists have
exploited both the elements of surprise and suicide to cheat detection and
prolong the orgy of bloodletting. But more than that, the political leadership
as well as the people of the area have not demonstrated enough will to nip the
crime in the bud.
It is true that the surprises of the
attacks and morbid interests in suicide bombings have conspired to stultify
every effort, but active support from the people would have made much
difference. Understandably, the crime of terrorism has no one-off solution. But
no doubt adequate intelligence from the people will go a long way in
frustrating the criminal activities of the homicidal group. They are not
ghosts. They live among people.
In a conflict of this nature – with
all the trappings of guerilla warfare of hit-and-run – information is crucial.
No effort channeled inappropriately should be expected to achieve positive
results. And if nothing is done on this score of heightening intelligence, the
security forces will face more daunting challenges.
Already their assurances that they
are capable of defeating Boko Haram are beginning to be greeted with skepticism
in some quarters. This is especially so when a lull in the activity of the
terrorists does not confirm a lasting peace, but an interlude before fresh
horrendous occurrences. Nigerians, especially those living in the area,
have learnt to keep their trunks ready and their ornaments few.
The Jonathan administration has
stood condemned in the court of virulent opposition. The recent slaughtering of
about 40 students of Federal Government College Buni Yadi, in Yobi State has
provoked emotive condemnation of the government. Those who criticise it cite
non-cancelation of the centennial celebrations in the wake of the tragedy as
insensitive. A more sensitive country like the US – they argue – would have
done so pronto.
This argument is puerile. How much
of such cancelations will suffice in an orgy of unrestricted violence?
Couldn’t it profit Nigerians more if the governors of the areas affected are
encouraged to put aside partisan politics and support the efforts of the federal
government in checkmating the menace? In which other country will a citizen
declare that they would make the country ungovernable should their President
decide to seek re-election?
Truth is that terrorism is not an
easy-peasy crime to overcome, and no one-off solution has successfully nipped
it in the bud anywhere in the world. Not even the US can claim to have a joy
ride on this score. No matter the effort of the Jonathan government in trying
to contain the terrorists, the death of any Nigerian in the hands of the
suicides will blunt the sharpness of such effort.
The effort of the administration in
trying to extricate the North East, and indeed Nigeria, from the menace of
suicides, may take a longer time for the opposition to appreciate. After all, a
cockroach, it is said cannot to be innocent at the gathering of fowls.
The crisis of the North East Nigeria
predates the Jonathan administration, no doubt. But things since got from bad
to worse. But that is not because of lack of trying on the part of the Jonathan
government. If anything, the administration has experimented with a
pollination of ideas, including, but not limited to inviting the suicides to a
roundtable discussion.
Following the recent carnage
Governors Isa Yaguda, Ibrahim Dankwambo and Garba Umar of Bauchi, Taraba and
Gombe respectively have resolved to invite the sect members to a discussion.
However late their action may be, it must be applauded since no time is too
late to destroy evil. Only a fool chases a rat while his house is up in flame.
There is a limit to politics.
The efforts of the Jonathan
administration to end the orgy of violence, evident in the investigation of the
extra-judicial killing of the Boko Haram leader; deploying of troops and
declaring partial state of emergency in three most affected states and seeking
co-operation with Nigeria’s neighbours on counterterrorism are public
knowledge. All the efforts – be they negotiation or military action – can only
work when the indigenes themselves are decided on cooperating with government.
Ditto for the political leadership
of the areas, a section of which is alleged to have propped up the sect for
selfish political reasons! When those youths were indulged in ways antithetical
to good conduct their masters forgot that “an indulgent and intemperate youth
delivers to age a body permanently worn out”. What we have in the North
East today is a Frankenstein’s monster which destruction must derive
essentially from the North East. It is not enough to condemn the Jonathan
administration on an issue which it has demonstrated enough will to end but
which lingers on because it is politically expedient for some.
Those who blame the administration
forget that you cannot catch a tiger cub without entering the tiger’s lair. And
it takes somebody who can wend through the maze to know where the tiger’s lair
is. Now that the governors of the affected zone have come to realise the need
to salvage the area from the carnage, a better result can be expected. The time
is now to walk the talk. Augurs have variously predicted that an end will soon
come for the unprovoked violence.
Perhaps the hour is here, for it is
hoped the suicides would be content to air their displeasure before their own.
Those who have played politics with this should cease and rethink the future of
the zone and, indeed, the future of the whole country. It is not enough to
mouth the condemnation.
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