Also published in Daily Trust
President Jonathan and Sultan of Sokoto
The
recent controversy generated by the Sultan’s call on President Jonathan to
grant amnesty to Boko Haram members, and Mr. President’s subsequent refusal has
further highlighted the absence of a common ground to work towards find a
lasting solution to this increasingly overwhelming security crisis.
Unfortunately also, most of the arguments and counter arguments given by most
of the commentators on this issue are devoid of objectivity hence the obvious
reflection of their ethno-religious and regional inclinations on their
respective commentaries.
On
one hand for instance, those who oppose the amnesty look at the issue primarily
from the narrow perspective of the inherent geopolitical rivalry between the
north and the south, which makes many of them suspect that the whole Boko Haram
crisis is a deliberate northern Muslim conspiracy to blackmail the federal
government with a view to extracting undue political advantage at the expense
of the largely Christian southern part of the country. They therefore assume
and indeed promote the view that, granting amnesty to Boko Haram members is
tantamount to succumbing to an ethno-religious and regional agenda.
Besides,
the opponents of the call for amnesty particularly those from the Niger Delta
region, many of whom by the way regard the country’s oil resources as
exclusively theirs, suspect that the issue is part of a grand scheme designed
by the Muslim north to eventually get the federal government make a huge
financial commitment to compensate the victims and rehabilitate the former
combatants, which according to them is an unnecessary waste of “their
resources.”
On
the other hand also, northerners, who groan under deteriorating security and
socio-economic conditions, and who see no real breakthrough in the military
operations conducted against the insurgents and equally suffer at the hands of
the security agents understandably support the call for amnesty, which they
believe would bring an end to this protracted security quagmire. They also
argue that, if former President Yar’adua; a northerner, a core northerner for
that matter could grant amnesty to Niger Delta militants, which brought their
insurgency to an end, nothing justifies Mr. Jonathan’s refusal to grant amnesty
to Boko Haram especially considering the fact that he himself is a Niger Deltan
hence he should reciprocate what his former boss, former President Yar’adua did
to his people.
Anyway
notwithstanding the foregoing and though in any crisis of this nature or any
internal insurgency for that matter, amnesty is necessarily granted to the insurgents
at the appropriate time in order expedite the process of ending the insurgency,
make reconciliation and sustain the hard-earned peace and stability; the
effectiveness and success of such amnesty depend entirely on the ability of the
government concerned to impose certain realities on the ground in the first
place, which would do away with, or at least limit, the insurgents’ available
chances of surviving anymore and expose them to the inescapability from
succumbing to the pressure of renouncing violence and accepting the
amnesty offer.
To
put this in Nigerian context, I believe that a call for amnesty to Boko Haram
insurgents at this particular juncture is too early, because government has so
far failed to impose such realities on the ground. The Joint Task Force (JTF)
for instance, and by virtue of its composition, which is composed of various
security forces and intelligent agents, is supposed to be capable of gathering
accurate intelligence on the insurgents to conduct pre-emptive and crushing
military actions with the amount of precision required to efficiently counter
the guerrilla warfare style adopted by the insurgents and subdue them without
having to inflict harm on the innocent civilians, or with the minimum and
absolutely inevitable collateral damage.
Unfortunately
however, the largely unprofessional way in which they conduct their operations
has not only failed to tackle the escalating insurgency but it in many
instances actually proves quite counterproductive. It is obvious that the
mediocrity that has characterized the operations of the country’s institutions
particularly over the past few decades, has taken its toll on the military’s
combat readiness and tactical skills also, hence their apparently dwindling
inability to tackle armed groups and insurgent in the country. This explains
why the insurgents are increasingly growing confident in their ability to
exhaust the security forces by drawing them into a potentially very prolonged
and exhaustive showdown. After all, sometimes the question of who actually
chases the other between Boko Haram and the other armed groups on one hand, and
the security forces on the other, is rather difficult to tell.
Therefore
the question whether Boko Haram should be given amnesty or not, should be viewed
in the context of a wider strategy to resolve the crisis permanently. This
strategy is of three dimensions, each dimension representing a particular
course of action to pursue by the appropriate authorities and institutions
simultaneously These institutions are, (1) the military authorities,
represented by combat strategists and various intelligence agencies, which are
expected to grow equal to the challenges and apply appropriate force
professionally to crush the insurgents, (2) Muslim clerical institutions,
represented by the office of the Sultan, which are expected to explore avenues
to engage the insurgents in intellectual debates with some carefully selected
Muslim clerics with a view to convincing them that their peculiar Islamic
religious understanding, which inspires them to engage in such violent
activities is completely wrong, and (3) political establishments,
represented by the presidency, which are expected to keep encouraging them to
renounce violence, which may of course and in due course include the
offer of amnesty and incentives to rehabilitate and integrate those who
renounce it.
Instead
of trading blames, and if this integrated approach is carefully implemented and
followed through diligently, I believe it will not only end this crisis, but it
will also prevent the resurface of the phenomenon that caused it.
1 comment:
Gaskiya ne wallahi
Post a Comment