“Fear a tumult which will affect
those who caused it as well as the innocent ones…” Quran Chapter Anfal 8:25 I
have deliberately quoted the above verse from the Quran, the Holy Book of Islam
since the majority of Borno People are Muslims without ignoring the fact that
there are other communities and towns within the state that are predominantly
Non-Muslims.
As a Nigerian like most of you, I express my deepest sympathy and great empathy with Governor Kassim Shettima, the Shehu of Bornu, Abubakar Ibn Umar Garbai El-Kanemi and the resilient people of Borno State over the seeming unabated Boko Haram insurgency.
As a Nigerian like most of you, I express my deepest sympathy and great empathy with Governor Kassim Shettima, the Shehu of Bornu, Abubakar Ibn Umar Garbai El-Kanemi and the resilient people of Borno State over the seeming unabated Boko Haram insurgency.
It is rather regrettable that when the military had
prepared for a massive onslaught with a declared 40 days ultimatum for a major
arrest, Nigerian troops escorting oil prospectors and geologists were ambushed
by the terrorists in the state.
While some of the victims including soldiers,
Civilian JTF Volunteers, and staff from the Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation (NNPC) and the University of Maiduguri (UNIMAID) were massacred,
few others were paraded in a video to attract public outrage and compel further
negotiations with the terrorists (Link: https://goo.gl/ky5hyD.) Rather than
engaging in frivolous conspiracy theories over the reasons and those behind the
Boko Haram crisis, which engulfed some states in Nigeria some years ago, it is
necessary to point out that it started in Borno with the involvement of the
people of the state and with supports, if not connivance, with influential
people in the state.
The Army spokesperson, Brigadier General Sani Kukasheka
Usman recently issued a statement that parents were donating their children for
suicide bombings that are now rampant in Borno State (Link:
https://goo.gl/vv49d6).
That was not the first of such warnings. In fact, on
September 25, 2015, the Nigerian Army had raised an alarm over plans by “some
highly-placed individuals” in the same state to sabotage military operations in
the region.
The Military even issued a strongly worded warning saying that “the
unscrupulous individuals and their cohorts were determined to reverse the gains
made and scuttle military efforts of achieving the Presidential directive to
defeat Boko Haram terrorists within 3 months.”
The statement further disclosed
that the elites “were enlisting the services of some Non-Governmental
Organizations in the grand design.”
(Link: https://goo.gl/qErv5V) Since the
recovery of many towns and villages by Nigerian troops from Boko Haram in
Adamawa and Yobe, the people of these two states and elsewhere have cooperated
with the security agencies.
Recent statements from the Department of State
Services (DSS) headed by a Katsina man, Lawal Musa Daura, have shown how useful
information provided by the people in other states, and intelligence sharing by
security agencies, curtailed terrorism in Gombe, Sokoto, Kaduna, Kano, Niger,
Kogi Taraba, Nasarawa, Plateau and the even Lagos States with arrests of many
suspects.
(Link: https://goo.gl/6UePPz) Surprisingly, one of the finest
strategies adopted by President Muhammadu Buhari, a veteran himself, was the
appointments of people from Borno into highly strategic positions in the
administration with the hope that the deliberate policy would assist in
intelligence gathering to end the Boko Haram insurgency and address the plight
of the victims.
Some of the individuals from Borno holding influential
positions at the national level include the Chief of Staff to the President, Abba
Kyari; the National Security Adviser, General Babagana Monguno; the Chief of
Army Staff, Lt General Yusuf Buratai and even the renowned jailer of corrupt
suspects and the boss of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC),
Ibrahim Magu among others.
We must not ignore the commitment and relentless
efforts of Governor Shettima, who is pumping large chunk of state’s share from
the Federation Account to address the security challenges, the plight of
Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) as well as the rehabilitation and
reconstruction of infrastructure destroyed by the terrorists in the state
(Link: https://goo.gl/P6n5XH).
It is rather baffling that with the incessant
Boko Haram ambush, suicide bombings and their propaganda videos, the suspects
are not detected early enough before wrecking havocs in soft targets as if they
drop from the moon.
Apart from the loss of lives and displacements of people,
the economic impact of Boko Haram activities in Borno is estimated at $5.9
billion (N1.9tr) according to the Army. Representing the Chief of Army Staff at
the first annual conference of Guild of Corporate Online Publishers, Major
General Peter Dauke said that Borno had about 400,000 houses damaged by Boko
Haram Link: https://goo.gl/Mj9Sg9) The latest Annual States Viability Index
(ASVI), published by the Economic Confidential, an economic intelligence
magazine, indicated that Borno State cannot survive on its internally generated
revenue (IGR) without the free flow of revenue from the Federation Account and
supports from other states like the recent donations by Northern governors
(https://goo.gl/ZugR6M).
Yet, the state possesses significant potentials in
agriculture, industry and other resources including a landmass and lake that
provide huge economic advantages for farming, fishing, husbandry, forestry and
tourism among others. Apart from its potentials for oil explorations, Borno has
billionaires with huge investments outside the state.
It is also blessed with
highly educated and skilled individuals that could contribute to the economic
development of the state.
More worrisome is the ever-increasing number of local
and International Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) in the state whose
impacts are not felt in the productive sector by facilitating job opportunities
for the people.
The NGOs merely engage in multi-million dollars advocacy
programmes and relief distributions of mostly foreign produced items to the
beggarly IDPs.
With the complex irony, could some groups and individuals be
profiting from this seeming and booming terrorism industry?
It is high time
that Borno people, especially the political elites, public office holders,
traditional rulers, community leaders and youth groups to do more in providing
the necessary information and intelligence for security agencies towards
addressing the insecurity, ignorance, poverty and other malaise in the state.
The reality on the ground is that Boko Haram menace is not only seen as Borno’s
‘wahala’ but a tragedy that affects Nigeria and its neighbours.