Nigeria beyond Boko Haram
With
ongoing onslaught against the Boko Haram insurgency in North- Eastern
Nigeria, the light at the end of the tunnel of this imbroglio finally
dawns.
Combined efforts of the multinational forces contributed by
neighbouring countries of Cameroon, Chad and Niger, with blazing power
of the Nigerian military have stormed the Sambisa fortress of evil and
dislodged the anarchists; this effort, too, has reclaimed areas like
Munguno and Mubi in Borno and Adamawa states with the Nigerian military
affirming that “…all areas seized by Boko Haram would be taken back and
the insurgents defeated to a point of surrender in the coming weeks,”
according to Brig. Gen. Chris Olukolade, the military’s spokesman. At
the last check, only Madagali in Adamawa State is still being occupied
by the murderous sect.
This renewed courage in the fight against
insurgency in Nigeria has also thrown up certain issues like what
post-Boko Haram Nigeria would look like, the preparedness or otherwise
to address the salient issues of social inequality that aided the
festered malaise and how to rally Nigerians to “#NeverAgain” allow such
evil creep into our national consciousness with our eyes widely open.
It is also gladdening that Nigeria’s
neighbours- Cameroon, Chad and Niger- have begun to show requisite
sincerity in ending an insurgency capable of eroding the mutual trust
and confidence that existed between Nigeria and each of the mentioned
countries. When Chadian president Idris Derby came out blazing recently
that Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau should come out from his already
known lair or face the dire consequence of elimination, it became more
glaring that the end has come for Boko Haram.
The only puzzling angle to this surge of
confidence is that thousands of lives have been lost and an entire
region destabilised in the intervening period. Many have adduced
political expediency to the renewed fight to a finish with Boko Haram-
that the government of President Goodluck Jonathan having realised that
the looming elections could be won or lost around the raging insurgency
decided to act on the eleventh hour. This is a point to ponder but we
must get back to the crucial issues at hand.
Regardless of who wins the March 28
presidential election being hotly contested between Muhammadu Buhari of
the All Progressives Congress and President Jonathan of the ruling
Peoples Democratic Party, the issue of how to manage the damage
perpetrated by an insurgency left to fester for over six years must be
clearly addressed in the overall interest of all Nigerians.
One of such issues that should occupy the
mind of the next administration should be about bridging the
socio-economic gap that exists among Nigerians, especially those of the
northern extraction. When poverty and illiteracy are rife in the
populace, the tendency to exploit such misnomer by mischievous elements
within and outside becomes high and vices such as insurgency and
brigandage ensue. Though the Victims Support Fund established by the
Jonathan administration is well-intended, it is not an end to itself;
there must be conscious efforts towards ensuring that those affected by
the insurgency are well-rehabilitated and further efforts made at
creating opportunities for the teeming youth population. Engaging the
youths requires a well thought-out policy framework which entails
harnessing the potential of the population towards individual
determination and national productivity. In an article entitled, “It’s
grim up North,” I had joined many Nigerians and external pundits to
point to the imbalance of educational advancement that places northern
Nigeria at a disadvantage.
If Nigeria is to move forward without
rancour, there must be a conscious attempt at balancing such a deficit,
thereby giving no room purveyors of mischief who could take undue
advantage of an illiterate population.
At the root of the dying insurgency,
also, is the crucial issue of responsiveness in leadership and proactive
approaches to security challenges. The Jonathan administration has come
under serious opprobrium for the manner of handling the challenges by
the insurgents. President Jonathan himself candidly admitted that his
government “underestimated” the magnitude of the challenge at the early
days of the insurgency in an interview on Kaakaki, a programme of the
African Independent Television. If the government had responded with the
zeal currently being employed, Nigeria would have been saved the
obnoxious stigma of the debauchery that Boko Haram embodies.
The precious time wasted in trading
blames and seeking truce with the insurgents would have been enough to
nip the terror in its bud. Hence, any government in power should be able
to identify what constitutes a threat to Nigeria’s sovereignty and meet
such with the needed leadership required in a crisis situation.
Nigeria beyond Boko Haram should be that
country with the outlook of the true giant of Africa where monsters like
Boko Haram, crude oil theft, corruption and other manifestations of
social dysfunction have no place to thrive.
Many have tried to put Nigeria in the
league of countries like Iraq, Afghanistan or Pakistan where terrorism
holds the people hostage but Nigerians refused to be so misidentified.
Never again shall Nigerians be “refugees”
and hostages in their own country and Africa’s “Big Brother” at the
mercy of her neighbours and the international community.
Long live the Federal Republic of Nigeria!
- Abonu, a citizens journalist and founder of Organising For Nigeria, wrote in from Asokoro, Abuja via adamsabonu@gmail.com . Twitter @adamsabonu
Comments