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Last week’s column on the last round of
what seems to have become routine
massacres on the Plateau elicited a
torrent of mobile phone texts - 215 in
all from readers of The Nation -
and a few emails. As usual many of them
were downright abusive. Several,
however, were civil and provided food
for thought on how to deal with the
issue. Below are a few of those
reactions, some of them edited for
grammar, punctuation and space.
Sir,
I would like to start by saying that I
never miss an opportunity to read you on
the back page of the Nation Daily on
Wednesdays. I have found most of your
contributions to be professional and
balanced. Sometimes though, I perceive a
certain slant when issues have to do
with religion and ethnicity. By this I
mean that your bias tends towards
protecting things Islamic/ Hausa
/Fulani. I cannot say that I blame you
entirely, because I find that most human
beings will be more favourably disposed
towards their own.
With regards to the Genocide on the
Plateau, I would like to share a few
things. You seemed to be somewhat
displeased with the banner headlines
that followed the counter genocide in
Jos last Sunday. You were not too
pleased that in January, when it
appeared that Muslims were on the
receiving end of an attack by “rampaging
youth”, the media appeared not to give
too much publicity to that particular
event. This, you posited, was as a
result of the media being “instinctively
hostile” to Muslims. The question we
should really be asking ourselves is
….why does this appear to be so?
From my little knowledge of religious
upheavals in Nigeria, it does seem to me
that a greater percentage of them have
been initiated by Muslims.
Unfortunately, I do not have at my
finger tips all the dates and instances
when this has occurred. Nobody from the
Muslim side has ever really refuted
these allegations effectively. I do not
know all the tenets of Islam, but I am
dead certain that tolerance is one of
the pillars. Mohammed, with all due
respect, can you say in general that we
have seen a particularly tolerant
Islamic community in Nigeria? I must
qualify that by saying
Northern Nigeria.
It appears that the Muslims of Northern
extraction seem to get along better with
non Muslims when they are outside the
North. This of course is my personal
opinion. I suggest that the media and
people at large have become weary and
impatient with the way and manner
Muslims have conducted themselves in
this country.
I perceive that you do not really like
the terms “settlers” and “indigenes”.
Quite frankly, neither do I but
unfortunately, we as a country have
operated a blighted or flawed federalism
and this is an issue that we had all
better start to deal with. Who is a
settler? When does a settler cease to be
a settler? We are all witnesses to the
Ife/Modakeke conflicts. They have their
roots in this same issue and both groups
are from the same ethnic group. Here I
may tend to agree with you that the Jos
crisis is not totally about religion.
They have roots in resources (economic),
sadly because the protagonists can be
divided into two broad camps i.e. Muslim
and Christian, religion has been thrust
to the fore and it will be extremely
difficult for anyone to convince
otherwise.
Sadly, the Jos issue as with most
conflicts in this country has never been
professionally dealt with. In conflict
studies, there is something called a
conflict tree. What most people see of
the tree is the foliage. However, there
is a trunk which supports that foliage
and there are roots from which the trunk
has sprung forth. In order to understand
the essence of that tree, the roots must
be unearthed. In the Jos conflict, we
must get to the roots or real issues and
stop dealing with the manifestations.
The conflicts have their roots in
history and surely we cannot discard our
history. This however, is what we have
done as Nigerians. We have, for reasons
best known to us avoided the real
issues. Attempting to wish them away as
it were. You know what happens? The
issues just mutate and manifest in a
different way. So what may have been an
issue between pastoralists and farmers
possibly over land, has become largely,
an ethno-religious matter. The panels
and the probes will yield nothing until
we begin to professionally analyze,
interpreted and where necessary, map out
the conflict. It goes beyond panels
consisting of retired and serving
generals, retired/serving jurists and
other “eminent” Nigerians to bodies
manned by proven academics…..historians,
sociologists, conflict managers,
psychologists and the like.
Mediation teams manned by trained
personnel will provide an avenue for all
the aggrieved to have their say. The
beauty of this is that the solutions as
to how these incessant conflicts can be
stopped will come from the people
themselves. There is a vast difference
between what the government thinks that
the people need for peaceful
coexistence, and what the people must
have. We must act fast on the Plateau,
for already; the Early Warning Signs of
another reprisal are in the offing.
Mazino Obaro Ikime,
Ibadan.
Sir,
I have read with pains your many
articles on Jos and your religious
sentiments expressed therein. I am
pained not because I practice a
different faith from yours but because I
share the same profession with
you and I expect I should consider you a
senior colleague. But your dispositions
on all issues have denied you of such
honour and respect.
You have lost your steam as a good
journalist. No wonder you have become
the errand boy of the likes of the
discredited IBB and co.
Let me remind you that the hatred you
have demonstrated against Jang and his
people have fallen short of an objective
journalist and your commentary on the
pages of newspapers has only exposed you
to hatred because you should know the
dysfunctional effect of the media if I
may remind you again.
Please have a second thought on what you
write.
Steven Kwande.
Sir,
For the first time ever since I have
been reading your column, I didn’t feel
like wringing your neck. Then it
occurred to me the attackers were not
Hausas but Fulanis. In any case well
done for saying the truth.
Ola James,
Lagos.
Sir,
Your article has truly hit the nail
right on the head. The problem on the
Plateau is simply FAILURE OF GOVERNANCE.
Jang is arrogant, know-it-all, but very
incompetent and a curse on Plateau.
Three years into his government he has
not commissioned any old or new project
that is even the size of a pin, other
than being at “war” with every other
Plateau man and other ethnic groups. In
Pankshin he only inspected on-going LGA
road project and not commissioned
anything!! Even those of us his kinsmen,
the Beroms, walk the street of Plateau
with our heads down and in shame for his
non-performance and promoting ethnicity,
vindictiveness, etc, at the expense of
our future generation. He is good
riddance to bad rubbish and we pray he
goes soon for a lasting peace.
Fom Dung-Gwom,
Jos.
Sir,
I would want to commend you for calling
the killing of the Beroms last Sunday
Genocide. That is exactly what it is!
While the January 17 crisis saw people
of all faiths and tribes killed, this
was targeted at a particular race. I
also agree that the crisis in Jos is
political and economic than religious.
You made mention of how Jos was
peaceful before now, so what went wrong?
The creation of Jos North, which the
Hausa/Fulani have claimed was created
for them, is the root cause of the
crises that have rocked Jos. I also
agree that the solution lies more with
the leaders and the structure of our
federation. We need to revisit the
residual issues of our land. We need
state police to enforce state laws and
allow states control their resources and
collect their VAT or Sales Tax. Then we
can hold the governors who are the chief
security officers of their states
responsible for any breakdown of law and
order.
H. Pam,
Jos.
Sir,
Going by the way you single out Governor
Jang as the perpetrator of the Jos
crisis makes me believe you Hausa/Fulani
would prefer a lily-livered coward who
will be cowed up and surrender to your
expansionist tendencies. Jang is
God-sent to the good people of Plateau
and no amount of evil plan can change
that.
Dave, Warri.
Genocide on
the plateau:The way out-By
Mohammed Haruna-
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