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Nigeria is
not easily reversible
By Col
Abubakar D. Umar (rtd)
Newsdiaryonline Sat Feb 4,2012

Col Umar
Boko Haram's ambition of creating a climate
of fear, terror and panic ahead of their plan to re-invent
Nigeria, seem close to reality. A visitor to some of the major
cities in northern Nigeria - Kano, Bauchi, Maiduguri, Kaduna etc
- will be forgiven to conclude that Nigeria is at war. Indeed,
every passing day brings heart rending stories of cruel killings
from Boko Haram's bombs and explosions with panic stricken
citizens running from pillar to post. And with police and
military check-points conducting widespread stop and search
everywhere, the scenario of a nation at war is hardly
disputable.
There are many, many issues that the Boko
Haram insurgency has thrown up which cannot be easily addressed;
some have no solutions at all. For example, Boko Haram say their
prime goal is to impose Shari'a Law throughout Northern
Nigeria. In other words, they are seeking to dismantle
this country as we know it and to create another in which they
alone will rule. But we have also been told that they want to
eradicate decadence, corruption and injustice in our body
politic. And so on.
Yet, whatever it is that Boko Haram want to
achieve or create, one thing they seem to be doing rather well
now is setting the various groups in Nigeria one against the
other. One day, Boko Haram say they are killing christians
because Christians are killing Muslims; another day, they say
they will drive southerners out of the North because southerners
are sending Northerners out of the South; yet another day, Boko
Haram would say they are fighting the government because
overnment leaders and agents are
corrupt and unjust, etc.
After that, they will stand aside and watch with glee as
the different groups engage each other in mutual blame and
recrimination.
Despite all this, what is clear and what we
all see is that Boko Haram remains on the offensive and their
bombs do not discriminate between friends and foe;
notwithstanding their propaganda. And in the face of the
generalized climate of fear, apprehensions and mistrust, people
respond in ways that are
neither calm nor measured, precisely the type of reaction
that pleases Boko Haram. This has to change. People of goodwill
everywhere must beware of the nature of the problems we are
facing and should say or do nothing that will help the
aggressor.
Religious leaders, leaders of ethnic or
regional groups and politicians at all levels should step back
and ponder the role they wittingly or unwittingly have played in
the successes Boko Haram has recorded in it's bloody campaign to
destabilize Nigeria. One particularly unhelpful reaction came
from certain Igbo leaders who advised their kinsmen in the wake
of the onslaught by Boko Haram to move out of Northern Nigeria
and to return to their ancestral homes in the east. Clearly,
such advise, apart from playing into the hands of the
insurgents, is a wanton infringement of the civic and legal
rights of the people. An Igbo, Urhobo, Efamai,
Ekwere etc. living in Damaturu,
Minna, Zonkwa or Yola are bonafide citizens of these
cities as are
Kanuri, Tiv, Nupe or Hausafulani living in Port
Harcourt, Umuahia, Onitsha or Shagamu. This is a right
our Constitution has prescribed; a
right no one, not even temporary difficulties, should
take away. Besides, certain situations make such ideas utterly
anachronistic if not
entirely illogical. Over 200 people were reportedly
killed and over a thousand others injured with many more
displaced when two long feuding communities in Ezillo council
area of Ebonyi state clashed towards the end of last year. Where
were the survivors advised to re-locate to? No where else.
Truth is, Nigeria is currently in the grip
of unprecedented crisis of insecurity - Boko Haram, kidnappings,
armed robberies, militancy, communal conflicts etc - and there
is no shortage of purveyors of doomsday reports, feeding a
vicious cycle of suspicions, conspiracies and more insecurity.
As the authorities grapple with ways to address these
challenges, Nigerians must remain unflinching in their support
and cooperation so that together we will keep these troubles on
the front banner until they are addressed.
Now,
whether we need to
address our national problems through a sovereign national
conference as some are suggesting or through the constitutional
instrument of the legislature must take account of certain facts
of contemporary history. Despite the imperfections of a federal
set up, it provides a security umbrella to all it's federating
units. People are quick to cite the success stories of countries
that were created as a result of division - Pakistan,
Bangladesh, South Sudan, etc.
Often, they would rather not discuss the
greater success stories of countries that preserved their unity,
including Indonesia, Canada, Germany, nor the problems with
which the splinter republics grapple with. This is true not only
of Pakistan or South Sudan but even more ominously so with the
former Soviet Republics.
Unarguably, Nigeria is grappling with an
unwieldy administrative structure, a problem brought about in
part by agitations for self determination that led to the
creation of many unviable states and local governments. It is
our duty and responsibility to nurture our country and steer it
out of any temporary difficulties until it attains the
perfection we admire in others. Any one preaching or advocating
anything to the contrary should know of the implications not to
talk of the grave consequences on the lives of so many people
across the country.
We will say this openly and frankly and
without fear of contradiction that given the spread and depth of
our integration as a people, it is futile to expect Igbos,
Hausa, Yoruba or any ethnic group to relocate easily or
peacefully to their ancestral lands even if Nigeria were broken
up. It is not time alone; many things in nature are not
reversible. And we should never forget, it is decisions taken in
moments such as this that shape our destiny.
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