Editorial
Sustaining The War Against Boko Haram
The regime of fear and insecurity
occasioned by the recalcitrance of
Boko Haram’s insurgents may have been watered down significantly, following the successes recorded by the collaborative efforts of a multi-functional force consisting largely of Nigeria, Cameroon, Chad and Niger.
The recent relocation of Nigeria’s military high command to Maiduguri, Bornu State, the hot-bed of the insurgents in compliance with the recent presidential directive, has added further impetus to the nation’s onslaught against the insurgents. However, reports of renewed invasion of some isolated communities in the North-Eastern part of the country should however be seen as a reminder that the routing of Boko Haram is not over until it is over.
It is soul-lifting and morale-boosting that President Muhammadu Buhari has taken the bull by the horn by, not only directing the military high command, but also engaged in diplomatic overtures, especially with neighbouring countries, to finally stamp out the clear and present danger which the religious bigots represent.
The Tide therefore commends the Nigerian military for swiftly complying with the presidential directive, and charges it not to be distracted by the biased report of the Amnesty International.
The only way and means to check the menace of recalcitrance or their insurgences is to meet them with superior firearms and well-motivated military personnel.
We therefore urge the Nigerian military to be focused and summarily wipe-out the remnants of the insurgents whose mission, from all indications, is to destabilize Nigeria and create an Islamic State which is against the spirit of the federal constitution of Nigeria and its pluralistic foundation.
We are proud of the recent achievements of the military against the renegades which had tended to restore the pride of the ordinary Nigerian and confirm our high rating within the comity of nations and charge our military personnel to consolidate and summarily defeat the insurgents in no distant future.
The Tide is gladdened by the fact that peace and order has eventually returned to most parts of the north eastern region of the country, while relevant authorities are also busy providing the enabling environment for the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) who were dislocated by the menace of the insurgents.
We sincerely believe that our detractors, pessimists and unpatriotic elements who gleefully celebrated the pyrrhic victory of the insurgents when they took over military and police formations, including some local government areas in the troubled zone, will henceforth bury their heads in shame.
As the offensive intensifies, we urge the locals, traditional, religious political leaders and the youth to volunteer useful information that would assist the military track the insurgents to their hide-outs as some of them may have filtered into parts of the country for refuge.
Nigerians are, indeed, distraught and disturbed by the brazen callousness and monstrosity of the insurgency and wish that this dark spot of our history be put behind us sooner than later. Enough is enough.
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