Opinion
Militancy As An Option?
There is no gainsaying that the wanton destruction
of lives and properties in some parts of the north as a result of the baseless and criminal activities of some misguided elements, known and referred to as ‘Yan Boko-Haram (western education is taboo) is highly regrettable and condemnable. How on earth can a reasonable Muslim advocate for the total rejection of knowledge, when the first sacred verse of the Holy Qua’an revealed to Prophet Muhammad (S.A.W.) some fourteen centuries ago, enjoined the faithful to read? This strange idea is not only repugnant, but is totally alien to Islam, un-African and out of tune with reality.
But looking at the whole scenario with a different perspective, one can conveniently say that the debacle is caused by the inability of the government at all levels to properly cater for the basic needs of the people who are left to wallow in abject poverty and penury.
Tell me, in a hopeless situation such as this, what will stop the idle youths whose minds have become devils’ workshop from adopting measures that will help them to burn their much suppressed extra energy? And what will safeguard them from easily succumbing to the negative influence of some deviant elements in the society as is being witnessed today?
This debacle is surely an eye opener for government to sit-up, it is a strongest statement so far, that all is not well with the polity. The masses are fed-up with bad-governance and insensitivities. They have totally lost faith with the system which cannot guarantee the provision of some basic social-amenities and are in need of changes!
Had it been that all the institutions of government were really working, the situation would not have degenerated to such a sorry state. This is because the intelligence arm of government ought to have discovered those behind the strange idea and subsequently nip them in the bud, before inflicting much damage. The manner of approach adopted by the security agents in containing the menace has left much to be desired. It has effectively demonstrated the fact that our leaders are not very good students of power management theories.
The 42nd law of power by Robert Greene states that: “Strike the shepherd and the sheep will scatter”. If government was proactive enough to have arrested the leader of the deviants, the large scale causalties would have been considerably avoided.
According to Robert Greene, “trouble can be traced to a single strong individual, the stirrer, the arrogant underling, the prisoner of good will. It allows such people room to operate, others will succumb to their influence. Do not wait for the troubles they cause to multiply, do not try to negotiate with them they are irredeemable. Neutralise their influence by isolating or banishing them. Strike at the source of the trouble and the sheep will scatter!”
But unfortunately, instead of doing just that, Nigerian government has been treating all the apparent security threats with levity, only to wake up after the damage has been done and adopt haphazard and after-thought measures.
Where were our leaders when the same Greene’s 42nd law of power amply stated that: “Do not waste precious time trying to steal a sheep or two; do not risk life and limb by setting upon the dogs that guard the flock? Aim at the shepherd, lure him away and the dogs will follow. Strike him down and the flock will scatter, you can them pick them off one by one”.
Where were our leaders, when the Chinese poet, Du Fu stated that: “If you draw a bow, draw the strongest? If you use an arrow, use the longest. To shoot a rider, first shoot his horse. To catch a gang of bandits, first capture its leader. Just as a country has its border, so the killing of men has its limits. If the enemy’s attack can be stopped with a bow to the head, why have any more dead and wounded than necessary?”
If the heart-rending killing of Yan boko-haram can be stopped by eliminating the leader of the gang, what stopped the government from going ahead with that option? If the leader of the deviants can be taken care of with a single bullet to the heart, why have any more dead and wounded than necessary?
More disturbing is the fear that having realised the futility of fighting the government directly, the rebels might try to adopt the Niger Delta option which has so-far proved highly effective. Even at that, the Niger Delta militants, despite having more sophisticated weaponries, international connections, adequate purse and internal collaborators; never confronted the federal authority headlong as the bunch of ignorant Bako Haram have tried to do. So these ignoramuses called Boko Haram might go under for now and begin the process of re-strategising for an all out onslaught in the future.
Therefore, our leaders at all levels, both political and religious leaders, need to reflect deeply about the palpable tension simmering in the polity as a result of corruption and bad-governance before more dangerous and more sinister events begin to take its toll. Meanwhile, serious and urgent measures that will contain the fury of these gangsters, or better still devil’s advocates should be taken by the government. A stitch in time saves nine.
Tsakuwa resides in Port Harcourt.
Kabiru Tsakuwa
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