
President, Muhammadu Buhari
Aside
from his renowned firm anti-corruption posturing, the military
background of President Muhammadu Buhari, being a retired army General,
was perhaps, partly responsible for his winning the March 28
presidential election. Apart from the slide in the fortunes of the
nation’s economy due to the dwindling price of oil, national insecurity,
especially the one occasioned by the dastardly activities of the Boko
Haram sect, has become a major source of concern to the corporate
existence of the nation. Hence, most Nigerians, either rightly or
wrongly, were convinced that with a tested army general of Buhari’s
calibre at the helms of national affairs, Boko Haram insurgency would
soon be comprehensively dealt with.
However,
the way things have recently turned out have dashed this hope, at least
for now. Rather than diminished, the devilish activities of the sect
have gained unbelievable momentum in the past few weeks. A few hours
after the President had referred to the group as “godless” and
“mindless”, during his inauguration, the sect struck with nauseating
audacity, characteristically leaving in its trail sorrow, tears and
blood. In the past few days, the sect has launched renewed attacks on
Maiduguri, the Borno State capital, perhaps to defiantly rubbish
President Buhari’s directive that the military high command be relocated
to Maiduguri. According to reports, the Islamists arrived in the
Moronti area of the city by river but were incapable of advancing
further because of wide ditches and embankments dug by soldiers around
the city limits. They then began shooting sporadically at Ajillari
Cross, a few kilometres from Moronti, thus throwing the area into
confusion with civilians running for cover. The Islamists were later
suspected of a suicide attack at a mosque in the city some days later,
which killed 26 people and injured 28 others. In another development,
about 150 people were reportedly killed by the sect in a fresh attack on
Maiduguri.
The recent renewed offensive of the Boko
Haram sect is instructive in many ways. One, it goes to actually confirm
that the group is in no way a religious one and as such could, by no
means, be championing, as it had erroneously been proclaiming, the
promotion of Islam. The fact that the sect has particularly chosen the
revered month of Ramadan, when Muslim faithful seek to maintain peace
with all men and their God, to launch criminal attacks on renowned
Muslim locations and adherents, is a pointer to the reality that it is,
indeed, a “godless” and “mindless” sect. No sane group, purporting to
promote religious cause, should take recourse to bloodletting when it is
common knowledge that God abhors such a tendency.
Also, the fresh Boko Haram renewed
offensive readily rubbishes an earlier ploy in some quarters to give the
group a political colouration. In the thick of its dastardly attacks in
the country, especially during the time of former President Goodluck
Jonathan, attempts were made to politicise the activities of the group.
Surprisingly and, perhaps, ridiculously, the Department of State
Services allowed itself to be caught in the web of this seemingly
spurious claim. The spokesperson for the group, Ms. Marilyn Ogar, once
insinuated that the then opposition All Progressives Congress was
responsible for the spate of bombings in the country. Speaking during an
interview on Channels Television, Ogar claimed that each time the APC
had an election, a spate of bombings followed. She said: “We moved to
Anambra and APGA won in Anambra, there was bomb blast. We moved to
Ekiti, the PDP won in Ekiti, there was bomb blast. We thank God that we
were able to deploy appropriately. The results have come out and the APC
has won and thank God there was no bomb blast. We should thank God that
since after the Osun State election there has been no bomb blast. Glory
be to God,” she added when Channels TV reporter asked her if she was
insinuating that the APC was responsible for the bomb blasts across the
country.
Though Ogar did not provide any evidence
to back her allegation that the APC was behind the Boko Haram bombings
in the country, many believed it was part of a grand ploy to paint the
party and its then presidential candidate, Muhammadu Buhari, in bad
light in order to diminish their chances of winning the 2015 elections.
At the height of this wild claim, Buhari was widely portrayed as one of
the major sponsors of the sect. It took a dastardly attack on him
somewhere in Kaduna State for many to start giving the claim a second
thought. With the renewed onslaught of the sect, in-spite of a Buhari
Presidency, it is now quite clear that the Boko Haram insurgency is
beyond politics.
The truth of the matter is that Boko
Haram is a terrorist sect. To underline its wide acclaim as a globally
recognised terrorist sect, the sect was designated by the US Department
of State as a terrorist organisation in 2013. In the first half of 2014,
Boko Haram killed more than 2,000 innocent and hapless civilians, in
about 95 attacks. In the last three years, more than 3,000 people have
lost their lives as a result of its operations. A recent research
claimed that Boko Haram attacks have left at least 12,000 people dead
and 8,000 crippled in the last three years while hundreds of thousands
have fled their homes for the fear of the insurgents.
Therefore, we need to become less petty
as a people. We need to stand up together and act decisively against
terror. Those who are waging war against our nation have demonstrated
that they care less about mundane dividing factors such as ethnicity,
religion and politics. Religion, ethnic and political affiliations
simply mean nothing to these agents of death who have sworn an oath to
“Ogun”, the Yoruba god that bathes with blood. All they want is blood,
nothing but more blood. To them, there is no peculiarity in blood. Blood
is blood.
Consequently, the various security
agencies in the country need to be encouraged to do more than they are
presently doing in the management of the country’s security situation.
In as much as it is true that terrorism is becoming a global challenge,
our security bodies need to exhibit more decisiveness and
professionalism in their handling of prevailing security condition in
the country. One primary duty of government, all over the world, is the
protection of the citizenry. The present trend that exposes Nigerians to
unhindered horrid attacks and premature deaths is, to say the least,
intolerable. Consequently, the sack of the service chiefs and their
immediate replacement by the President are commendable and fitting
enough, even though seemingly belately.
We all have a duty to maintain peaceful
co-existence in the country. We need to lay more emphasis on human
capital development, especially in places with higher rate of
instability.
Finally, our political leaders must
eschew all tendencies that could further throw the country into a deeper
crisis. God bless Nigeria!
10:09
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