When Will Nigeria be Finally Abducted?

Introduction

Is Nigeria not being gradually but steadily abducted by Boko Haram bandits, herders, kidnappers, armed robbers and terrorists? The insecurity scenario in the country today, is quite frightening and heart-rending. Let us see.

President Jonathan’s Tip of an Iceberg

Chibok, Borno State, 14th – 15th April, 2014

276 School Girls abducted by dreaded Boko Haram Insurgents. Former President Goodluck Jonathan was almost roasted alive. The present government’s leading lights, harped on it. The then candidate Buhari of APC and other APC stalwarts, salivated over the fatal blow to GEJ’s presidency by this singular unfortunate incident. 112 so far released, on the payment of an undisclosed huge ransom, according to sources including some Senators. Fast forward. Buhari clinched power and was sworn in on May 29, 2015, with the most outstanding campaign promise (aside revamping the economy and killing corruption), being to lead from the front (as a retired former military Head of State); and crush Boko Haram. Nigerians believed him. After all, he fought at the war front during the three year bloody Nigerian-Biafran civil war.

President Buhari’s Era of Serial Abductions

However, let us see Buhari’s ugly tale of the tape: Dapchi, Yobe State. 110 school girls abducted on February 19, 2018. 110 have been released on the payment of a huge ransom (the exact amount of which the Buhari government has refused to tell us to date). Six are still held, including beautiful Leah Sharibu, who refused to recant her Christian faith.

Kankara, Katsina State. 340 school children abducted in December, 2020, by about 100 Boko Haram bandits riding motorcycles. They were all released after the payment of huge sums (amount not disclosed to date by an ever opaque government). Big business. More lucrative than citing industries, or setting up banks. Dangote that goes to the bank to take huge loans, will no doubt be green with envy.

Kagara, Niger State. 42 people, which included 27 students, 3 staff of Government Science Secondary School, and 12 of their family members abducted. They have been released by the bandits after payment of huge sums (amount not disclosed to date). Then, more recently, Zamfara State Government Girls Secondary School, Jangebe, was their next port of call. About 315 of the 500 boarded students were abducted. Governor Bello Matawalle who has so far done well on security matters, and in pushing back armed bandits, was quite optimistic they would be released without ransom. They were indeed, released. The Governor shocked the world, when he said the gateman actually knew about the abductions, because some of the released students narrated how the bandits extended their greetings to him.

A common thread and trend: Girls schools are targeted. Weaker vessels. Not boys schools! Huge sums demanded as ransom. Payment made. Girls (not all) suddenly released. Bandits and Boko Haram smile to their hideouts. They purchase more weapons. They wait a while. Strike again. Circle repeats itself. No Federal Government in sight. Oh, it is in sight – but only in boasting that it will fish out the bandits, and stop further reoccurrence. That is the end. How many students so far abducted? 276 under Jonathan. 807 under Buhari. Well over 1000. This country is in a complete mess. Worse than ever before. So, when will Nigeria be finally abducted? As I ruminated over this, Buhari appeared to have woken up from a nearly six year deep slumber of uninspiring, colourless and lack-lustre presidency, when he recently directed security agents to shoot at sight, anyone seen with AK-47 guns and other sophisticated weapons in the bushes and forests. He has also ordered a no-fly coverage over some North West States, especially Zamfara State. Had Buhari clamped down on these AK-47-wielding herdsmen that brandish them publicly since 2015, Nigeria would have been safer by now. Today, insecurity reigns supreme. Death is prowling around, like a loose cannon. If we are not killed by corona virus, old age (this is acceptable), or air crash through our decrepit aircrafts, we are murdered in cold blood in our homes or on our farms by armed AK-47-welding herdsmen. If we are lucky to escape the snares of vicious high way marauding kidnappers, we are shot at or daggered by blood-sucking Boko Haram insurgents, fiendish terrorists, ruthless armed bandits and savage armed robbers. So, where do we go from here?

Nigeria has become a sprawling field of bloodbath, a crimson and gruesome theatre of brutality, mayhem, violence and viciousness. We have since lost our humanity. We have sold our souls to satan and his demonic forces. Nigeria is becoming a failed State. All the indices stare us, “korokoro eyes” in the face. What next? Only God Almighty can answer that. Me, I “siddon look”, as I “don talk my own taya”.

That Failed Kidnap Attempt on Sunday Igboho

The act of a combined team of soldiers, DSS and Police, numbering about 40 attempted to arrest and detain Sunday Adeniyi Adeyemo Igboho, was too much in the form of a kidnap attempt. Igboho was said to have been waylaid along Ibadan/Lagos Expressway, whilst on his way to see Pa Ayo Adebanjo in Lagos. It was totally and absolutely unnecessary. A government exists to protect its citizens, not to terrorise them. If the government believed that Sunday Igboho had committed an offence, the best route would have been to simply send him an invitation to report to a Police station for interrogation.

If the security agents felt there were any internal security issues or breach of the law, they should have invited him to the DSS or Police office. It became therefore, totally absurd that, a whole security armada like soldiers, the Police and the DSS will waylay an innocent Nigerian citizen in a commando-like manner, and attempt to abduct him. At least, Nigerians have not been told he has committed an offence, or what offence, if any.

What if Sunday Igboho and his handlers had felt they were being kidnapped, and responded with a shootout? There would have been unnecessary mayhem and loss of lives, because of the indecent and incongruous manner and way the attempted arrest was carried out.

What the government does not still seem to understand, is that because it has failed to give security and welfare to the Nigerian people as provided for in Section 14 of the 1999 Constitution, ethnic nationalism is fast rising in a way that ethnic groups and the various nationalities in the Nigerian contraption, have begun to feel that they need to go the extra mile to protect themselves from ravaging insecurity. That is why I always ask, who is advising this government?

The present ravaging insecurity is what led to the emergence of Amotekun in the South West, and the Eastern Security Network in the South East. There have also mushroomed, various local policing militias across the country. It is the failure of the government to provide security, that is at the root cause of these defensive measures.

Someone needs to drum it into the ears of this government, that the young man with a tattooed face that proudly displays his tribal marks is no longer an ordinary “small boy” representing himself alone. He has become a metaphor, for the Yoruba struggle for self-determination. At least, if you are not giving us self-determination, do not kill us in our homes and farms, the young man seems to be yearning on behalf of the Yoruba race.

Sunday Igboho is no longer ordinary. He is the equivalent of IPOB’s Nnamdi Kanu for the Igbos. He came out from nowhere, to become the voice of the voiceless. He wears the new face of the Yoruba struggle for emancipation. The earlier this government understands this, the better for everybody.

Sunday Igboho from Igboho town, recently came to national limelight when he stormed Igangan on January 15, 2021, and gave a quit notice to Fulani herders terrorising his people in the Southwest through kidnappings and killings. Igboho was said to have earlier risen to fame during the Ife-Modakeke fratricidal war, in which he played a major role between 1997 and 1998. Born in Igboho of Oke-Ogun area of Oyo State on October 10, 1972, he had relocated to Modakeke in Osun State. He started life as a roadside motorcycle mechanic, and later ventured into car sales. Upon his return to Ibadan, he met former Oyo State Governor, Lam Adesina, and also worked with Rashidi Ladoja. The Akoni Oodua of Yoruba land, is the new face of the Yoruba struggle for emancipation, self-determination and racial respect. Does the Federal Government realise this? Igboho is believed by his teeming admirers, to possess magical powers that lift him beyond mere mortals like you and I. So famed was he that, a 2017 Yoruba Movie (Parts 1-4) by the same name “Sunday Igboho” was cast after his personality. Does this government appreciate these peoples’ sentiments?

Way Forward

Sunday Igboho can approach a court of law under the Fundamental Rights Enforcement (Procedure) Rules and seek protection from being killed, arrested, being waylaid, being detained and having his humanity degraded. He can go to court to seek his fundamental rights that he is entitled to freedom of movement, freedom of association, and the right to move about and across Nigeria to any part that he wishes, without let or hindrance. See Sections 32, 33, 35, 40 and 41 of the 1999 Constitution.

A court of law will readily grant him that protection, because it has not been shown that he has committed any offence; and none is alleged against him. If any has been alleged against him, then they could invite him over to make a statement. We are operating a constitutional democracy where things are done by the rule of law; not rule of the thumb.

This government is too jerky. It embraces too much fire brigade approach to issues. That is the danger in it. The government must know that if they had killed Sunday Igboho, maybe with a stray bullet, or by mistake, or deliberately, I don’t think Nigeria would be having a nice time now.

The government should understand this. Let them understand that there is anger, despondency. There is fear across the country; fear of death, fear of fear. So, they (the DSS and the Police) should never attempt to do what they did last Friday, so as not to trigger unnecessary national hoopla, national insurrection, national commotion, national brouhaha. I have said my own.

THOUGHT FOR THE WEEK

“It was once said that the moral test of government, is how that government treats those who are in the dawn of life, the children; those who are in the twilight of life, the elderly; and those who are in the shadows of life, the sick, the needy and the handicapped.” (Hubert H. Humphrey)

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