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Northern Nigeria bleeds

The routinised official reactions to the latest tragedy, the slaughtering of farmers in Zabarmari, Borno State, have run their course

The routinised official reactions to the latest tragedy, the slaughtering of farmers in Zabarmari, Borno State, have run their course. The routine howls of condemnation have petered out. The dead have been buried. We don’t even know for sure how many were slaughtered. Which is correct: the official figure of 43 or the UNDP figure of 110? Whichever it is, they were unknown farmers. Mere statistics in life; mere statistics in death. We are set to settle back into the routine, chalking the tragedy up as the work of the devil for which not even the Nigerian state should be blamed.

But northern Nigeria bleeds.

The senate of the Federal Republic passed a resolution asking President Buhari to sack the service chiefs and rejig the national security architecture. This was the not first time the distinguished senators gave a voice to their anger, frustration and disappointment at the inability of the Nigerian government to  carry out its number one constitutional responsibility of making the people secure in their homes, offices, farms and on the roads. The law-makers rightly echoed the views of most Nigerians who feel that there is no alternative to rejigging the security architecture to bring in men with fresh ideas and proven capacity to give us hope in the hands of security men.

The resolution appears destined to suffer the same fate as earlier resolutions because the right of the president to decide the fate of his service chiefs is absolute; he would not let law-makers tell him what to do. He is the executive president, for crying out loud. The president ordered the military to take the fight to the insurgents; evidence that despite the total failure of such routine orders in the past, his belief in the capacity of his service chiefs to defeat Boko Haram remains unshaken. By the time you are reading it would have been one week since the slaughter. I am sure that like me, you are yet to hear of the arrest or the killing of Boko Haram operatives. As usual, the killers have disappeared, leaving the Nigerian military hoisted on the petard of their commander-in-chief’s misplaced belief.

Northern Nigeria bleeds.

Buhari has sent relief materials to the surviving victims of the slaughter; a gesture of presidential empathy, I bet. The farmers in Zabarmari have always produced their own food and fed themselves, needing no handouts of relief materials such as food from a caring president. All they hoped for was for the Nigerian state to protect them and their right to continue to eke a living from their small peasant holdings in safety. The Nigerian state let them down and the murderous Boko Haram insurgents moved in, slaughtered them and denied them the right to life.

Northern Nigeria bleeds.

The Sultan of Sokoto, His Eminence Sa’ad Abubakar, said the north is the worst place to live in the country today. Right. Nowhere in the old region is safe. Bandits, kidnappers, armed robbers and sundry criminal elements hitherto unheard of in the north have taken over and filled the vacuum created by the absence of federal and state governments.

Northern Nigeria bleeds.

Daily Trust of November 28, 2020, reported that in eleven months, 1,570 people were abducted in various parts of the north. The kidnappers demanded over N6.9 billion as ransom; the victims managed to secure their freedom with N311 million. The sultan said people go to bed with wands of money under their pillows to buy their freedom in case the kidnappers rouse them from sleep in the dead of night. It is no way for citizens to live in their own country.

Northern Nigeria bleeds.

The Daily Trust of November 30, 2020, quoted the president of the All Famers Association of Nigeria, Kabiru Ibrahim, as saying that farmers have abandoned their farms for fear of being killed or kidnapped. He said, “In the North-East, the situation is almost eleven years old and with no end in sight. No farmer will readily go to the farm with his slaughter going on. The already fragile food system will be adversely affected by the development.”

Northern Nigeria bleeds.

In the wake of the Zabarmari slaughter, the governor of Borno State, Professor Babagana Zulum, asked the federal government to let the foreign mercenaries return. The demand reflects his loss of confidence in the capacity of the military to defeat Boko Haram. His state has borne the brunt of the Boko Haram insurgency since 2009. According to the Daily Trust, former President Goodluck Jonathan brought the South African mercenaries ahead of the 2015 general elections. The mercenaries cleared Sambisa forest and the Mandara mountains of Boko Haram and made it possible for elections to be conducted in those areas. Jonathan similarly entered into an agreement with President Idriss Deby of Chad under which the Chadian military routed Boko Haram from the Lake Chad area.

When Buhari assumed office as president in May 2015, the agreements were not renewed. The mercenaries with proven capacity to defeat the insurgents, were sent back home. Perhaps Buhari thought he had a home-grown solution that made the assistance of foreigners unnecessary. We expected that magic, not least because he is a northerner and a two-star general with a civil war experience. Despite the presence of the various security outfits in Borno and Yobe states, Boko Haram continues to reign, unleashing a reign of terror on the people. They decide when and where to strike and make our security forces inept. No one knows how many girls and women they have taken away since they kidnapped the over 200 students from Chibok in 2014.

Northern Nigeria bleeds.

The north has bled enough. It is time to stop the bleeding. Every drop of bled shed by Boko Haram is the blood of an innocent fellow Nigerian. Every naira paid by a kidnapped victim to secure his freedom is an indictment of the Nigerian state. The demand for rejigging the security architecture does not question the president’s wisdom but it raises questions about his willingness to listen to voices other than his own. Omniscience is not one of the qualifications we take into consideration in electing our president.

Northern Nigeria must not continue to bleed. Buhari has a duty, as president and as a northerner, to stop the bleeding and make the north, and indeed, the country safe again. Everything in a nation rides on security. Without security, there can be no social and economic development. There is no way an insecure nation or community can enjoy peace and commit to its development. In making security the number one constitutional obligation for the federal government, the framers of the constitution knew only too well that security is the foundation for national development.

The president is busy awarding road contracts. But it is useless pouring billions of Naira into road construction when, because of insecurity, the roads would only be abandoned.

It bears repeating, Northern Nigeria is the poorest region in the country. Eighty per cent of the 100 million extremely poor people in the country are in the north. With heightened insecurity, no one should expect the situation to get better. Peasant farmers in Northern Nigeria feed the nation. They have been forced to abandon their farms with the twin unpleasant consequences of food scarcity, hunger and even famine and, of course, the deepening of their poverty.

The president does not need me to tell him that some of his close political associates have expressed their unhappiness at various forums because they feel he has disappointed their expectations. Alhaji Buba Galadima has predicted that Buhari would leave the country in pieces at the end of his tenure. Let us pray that it does not happen. Buhari did not inherit a country in pieces. His legacy should not be a Nigeria in pieces.

 

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