Opinion
Treating Boko Haram With Kid Gloves
The recent attack on a church in the town of Otite, Okene in
Kogi State, about 250 kilometer South West of the Federal Capital Territory
(FCT) Abuja, has added to the number of bloodshed in this country. In that
incident alone, twenty Nigerians were reportedly gunned down, while a host of
others injured when a suspected radical Jihadist sect, Boko Haram attacked a
branch of the Deeper Life Bible Church.
The brazen display of this act of terrorism shows a high
level of insecurity in the country. As we send condolences to the family of the
bereaved who are now made widows, widowers and orphans, the nation must
remember, with tears, the souls of our loved ones who had been killed in
similar circumstances, beginning from the post-election violence that occurred
at different locations in the Northern parts of the country.
We can not forget in
a hurry the Youth Service Corp (NYSC) members whose blood were shed; the
Christmas Day bombing of St. Thereasa’s Catholic Church in Mandalla that
claimed over 46 innocent lives; the coordinated attacks and sporadic shooting
which left at least 185 people dead, when explosions ripped through the police
headquarters in Kano; and the bomb blast that rocked the United Nations’
building in Abuja.
The rate of insecurity in this nation is alarming. The UN
terrorism report in 2011 indicates a total of 136 terrorist attacks in Nigeria.
The number of attacks has since grown beyond that. The fact-finding committee
set up by the Federal Government to investigate the prevailing security trends
in the country has however remained speechless. The question is, how long will
it take the Federal Government to tackle the problem of insecurity and
terrorism in the country?
Many people have suggested dialogue and negotiations as a
way out of the menace. The argument centres on the notion that a constructive
and non-violent approach to terrorism will offer a lasting solution to the
rising tide of insecurity in the country. They often point to Japan as an
excellent example of a nation that adopted peaceful approach to solve its
security problem.
Japan’s industrial cities, Hiroshima and Ngasaki were under
security threat by suicide bombers sometimes in 1945. After the holocaust,
Japan abandoned violence and adopted a peaceful course which it termed “reverse
course” for its national development. Today, Japan has risen to become a great
economic and technological world power.
In as much as I subscribe to the peaceful resolution of all
crises, I doubt if the same approach can work in tackling Boko Haram in
Nigeria. I do not see how successful the Federal Government can negotiate peace
with those who think violence is a ticket to paradise. The best alternative is
to declare war on Boko Haram, just as the United States of America did in 1998,
when Islamic terrorists attempted to bomb the US embassies in Kenya and
Tazania. Former US President Bill Clinton speedily declared war on terrorism
and sent American planes to bomb terrorist camps in Afghanistan and Sudan. This
made the terrorists withdraw to their enclave.
Nigerian government should act like the United States by
declaring war on Boko Haram. Begging the so-called Islamic sect for dialogue
and negotiations amounts to treating the issue of insecurity in the country
with kid gloves. It even amounts to an
act of cowardice on the part of the government. Foreign assistance should be
sought in this respect if our security agency is incapable of tackling these
criminally minded terrorists.
If the government must make this nation safe for the
citizens and for economic development, proactive measures other than
conventional approach must be adopted.
Meanwhile, Nigeria’s security outfit needs a total
overhauling to save the Northern part of the country from becoming a breeding
centre for future terrorists. The act of terrorism in the North may soon spill
to other parts of the country if harsh security measures are not adopted.
James is of the Department of Mass Communication, RSUST,
Port Harcourt.
John James
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