Opinion
What The Moment Demands
Going through various Nigerian newspapers in recent weeks, a major theme featuring in all of them is security, with other political issues which are not excluded from national security. The impression portrayed points towards a nation in need of salvation. For the irrepressible Most Rev. Matthew Hassan Kuka, “the nation has since become a massive killing field, as both government and the governed look on helplessly. A thick and suffocating cloud of desperation, despondency, desolation, gloom and misery hangs in the hot air”. A sad Prophesy!
The Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria (PFN) pleaded with President Muhammadu Buhari to secure Nigerians, while state governors were asked to pay more attention to the needs and welfare of their citizens. To non-state violent actors, the PFN urged them to stop the wanton killing of Nigerians. We were also told that “Gumi briefed Obasanjo on his recent peace advocacy visits to the Fulani bandits in the North, in the hope that government would understand the situation better and adopt his suggestions as the best way of ending the current insecurity crisis”.
For Governor Seyi Makinde of Oyo State, his vow was to expose those politicising security. He was quoted as saying: “If they are politicising security issues because they want to be in power in 2023, it means they are making mistake. If there is no Oyo State or Nigeria by 2023… who and what are they going to governor?” Anyone would wonder Gumi’s “best way of ending the current insecurity crisis”. Security is a serious concern.
Kaduna State Governor, Nasir El-Rufai, was quoted as refuting media reports that intermediaries were hired or appointed to negotiate with bandits on behalf of the state. The question about politicising of security is not far from the attitude taken towards bandits and unknown gunmen or insurgent groups. As insecurity does not exist in a vacuum, then there arises the question of what accounts for a widespread state of insecurity. It would not be enough for a former Vice President, Atiku Abbakar, to urge Nigerians to pray for the peace and unity of the country. Justice also counts.
The announcement of the appointment of a new Deputy Inspector General of Police, Usman Alkali Baba, followed a news that “Gunmen razed Ehime Mbano police divisional headquarters. On arrival, the gunmen freed the suspects before wreaking havoc”. It is not enough for the Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) to accuse Federal Government of sponsoring attacks in Igboland. A relevant question is: “Why was there no security resistance during the breaking of Owerri Prisons and Imo State Police headquarters in an operation that lasted more than one hour?”
What Governor Makinde of Oyo State meant by politicising of security is not far from “statements of persons who said they speak for Mr. President – the same person who defends Miyetti Allah vigorously each time people are killed in Benue or Southern Kaduna, even when the survivors say they heard their attackers speak Fulfude”.
There was another security issue where it was reported that “Ebonyi indigenes demand probe into escape of 55 suspects from police custody”. We were told that “55 out of 66 hired militias, who were successfully arrested by the Nigerian military led by the GOC, Commanding 82 Division, Maj-Gen. Taoreen Lagbaja, escaped from the custody of the Nigeria Police Force”. An allegation of possible complicity against the Ebonyi State Commissioner of Police, Aliyu Garba, in the escape of the suspects handed over to him by the Army, was made. There was also a reference to “hidden agenda of the command whose officers and men have been sternly accused of compromise…”
A part of politicising of security includes the “ethnic profiling of crimes and criminality”, which is associated with stereotype or labeling, and putting a tag of criminality on definite groups. Countries with mixed racial and ethnic groups of minorities have tended to put some tags or label on minority groups as being associated with high rate of criminality. This criminal sterotype obviously raises questions of racial and ethnic prejudices and wrong judgments. Is it right to associate corruption and violent crimes with Blacks? Is it fair or true? Even with statistics!
Growing cases of terrorism and banditry in Nigeria should not always be associated with Islamism or Fulani ethnic groups. Although the President was advised by some concerned Nigerians to call his kins men to order, the security situation in the country should not have any stereotype attached to it.
Politicisation of security also includes the harassment of Igbo-speaking ethnic groups and the labeling of MASSOB as a terrorist organisation. A non-Nigerian was actually heard saying that “labeling MASSOB as a terrorist organisation was a political propaganda and meant to divert attention…” There is also a suspicion in some quarters that Boko Haram is a “political machine” with some hidden agenda.
As situation are, currently, recrimination, political propaganda and shenanigans are not going to be of any help. Rather, situations would get worse if we continue that way. Globally, every country is being offered opportunities to turn liabilities into assets and challenges into positive changes for the better. What the situations demand primarily are self examination and a possible purging of the conscience.
For Nigeria, unimaginable looting and plunder of public resources had taken place over the past 56 years. The scrambles for power are the scrambles to keep secrets secret and unearned wealth secure for the faceless ones involved. Ethnicity, religion and willing hirelings are being co-opted into the service and game of survival. One possible safety-remedy is to give back to the society excess luggage of unearned wealth by those who can feel the pulse of their conscience, before the night comes. Surely, there is a need for purgation on the part of those who play pranks with over 250 million people. Call this a prophesy!!
Dr. Amirize is a retired lecturer from the Rivers State University, Port Harcourt.
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