Opinion
What Does Boko Haram Really Want?
The term “Boko Haram” is an abhorable and detestable coinage that has worn eccentric, yet national recognition for almost two years now. It first struck national attention in 2010 and has since then assumed a high level of notoriety.
The operation of this sect has become so dastardly to the chagrin of poor victims who are always caught in an impotent web of helplessness. This is why it has become very imperative to really know what the Boko Haram wants from Nigeria.
To me, the Boko Haram insurgency is more or less a gorilla and coward type of warfare that the sect is waging without definition, bearing and focus. It is disheartening and senseless that some personalities in the North could attribute the cause of terror attacks in the country to bad leadership and governance.
Within the period of northern domination in leadership and governance, how many mosques or innocent citizens of the northern extraction were attacked by the southerners? Or could we say their tenure witnessed perfect administration devoid of leaders ineptitude and economic misfortune? How come do we witness high level of insecurity in the country now that a South South man is at the helm of the nation’s affairs?
It appears that the Boko Haram insurgency is a calculated attempt to discredit and render the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan useless and ungovernable.
If this suspicion is not true, then what else does the Boko Haram want from Jonathan’s government?
If we take a retrospective view of the objectives of the various struggles and agitations that had taken place in the country from the pre and post independence era till date, it will be seen that the objectives were clearly stated and defined.
For instance, the late Odimegwu Ojukwu’s led Biafaran war was anchored on achieving political emancipation for the Igbos. Also, the Adaka Boro’s showdown with the Federal Government was based on achieving political autonomy for the Niger-Delta people.
In the same vein, the struggle by the Movement for the Survival of Ogoni People (MOSOP) in the South –South was well defined. MOSOP, through the inspirational leadership of the late prolific writer and environmentalist, Ken Saro Wiwa, declared a just war on environmental degradation in Ogoni and the Niger Delta due to oil exploration and exploitation activities of Shell and other multinationals operating in the area. The group therefore called for resource control.
This has become a denomination for struggles and agitations by most people in the world today. The militancy in the Niger Delta came as a result of the constant deviance of the Federal Government to the issue of environmental plight of citizens of the area.
Now, if Boko Haram’s claim that it is fighting against western education is anything to go by, why does the sect attack the church and helpless Christians? Are the churches and Christians part of the educational institution of the country? What connection do the Christians in the north have with western education?
From the foregoing, it is clear that the Boko Haram is only acting a script written by some of the greedy leaders in the north who refuse to be grateful to the south in particular and Nigeria in general.
The Niger Delta militancy was apparently targeted at oil installations which are the cause of pollution in the area and not at helpless and innocent Nigerians nor any particular faith.
In particular, the statement credited to the sect’s spokesman, Abu Qaqa, published by the Nation Newspaper in its front page of Wednesday August 1, 2012, did not vindicate the sect’s action.
For instance, he said, “we want to stress that in our struggles, we only kill government functionaries, security agents, Christians and anyone who pretends to be a Muslim”
He continued, “we wish to reiterate that our crusade is not for personal gain, it is meant to ensure the establishment of an Islamic State by liberating all Muslims from the excesses of the infidels.”
He restated the sect’s belief that Allah “will reward us with his famous paradise in the hereafter as he rightly said in chapter 9 verse lll of the Holy Qur’an.”
This is a belief that is bound in fantasy and stupid ecstasy.
The Holy Quran, from where Islam derives its concept and practice, does not preach violence or destruction of lives and properties. It rather preaches peace. In fact, Quran specifically states in some of its chapters that there is no compulsion in religion. Where then the Boko Haram sect derives its own concept of religion by compulsion and violence?
The answer can never be far from the fact that the war being waged by the Boko Haram is for selfish gains and not divine. Boko Haram is just a criminal gang that hides under the guise of religion to destabilise the country.
Since it cannot spell or define in a precise and concise term what it wants from government, it is imperative on the Federal Government to use its might to wage a relentless war against the group and other terrorists who are bent on destroying Jonathan’s government and by extension the Nigerian nation. Mr President should muster the courage of former President Olusegun Obasanjo and deal decisively with this faceless group that is menacing and molesting his government.
Hon. Tordee (JP), a public affairs analyst, resides in Port Harcourt.
Manson, B. Tordee
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