“When a hunter sets a trap using a
goat as bait, he doesn’t expect to catch rabbit” A Nigerian Proverb.
I am one the millions of residents of
Kaduna State who have been under lockdown since bombs went off in Zaria and Kaduna
two Sundays ago. We have been let out for a total of ten hours since we were
clamped into detention, and part of those hours were promptly utilized by our
traditional religious combatants to resume hostilities. As things stand now, we
live in fear over what will happen on Sunday(I am writing this on
Saturday). Will they bomb churches again, and force us to resume hostilities, as
Christians pounce on the nearest Muslim for reprisals, and Muslims embark
on counter-reprisals? Now that President Jonathan is back with a sacking here
and a sacking there, should we dare to dream that this nightmare will be more
effectively handled?
Most citizens here have no food, no
water, no power, no peace, and no faith that they will not be casualties
tomorrow, or the next day. I cannot write a new column as my secretary, Ruth, lives
on the other part of a city rigidly segregated by faith. But I can share with
you the views I expressed in December last year over our situation. How little
has changed:
The bombs that went off on Christmas Day at
Madalla in Niger State, in Jos Plateau State and in Damaturu and Potiskum, in
Yobe State appear to have many purposes. One was to send a signal that whoever
the Boko Haram bombers are, they plan to sustain their terror campaign. Two,
the bombs were intended to further expose the vulnerability of the Nigerian
State and its citizens, in spite of elaborate security arrangements to ensure a
relatively safe Christmas. Three, the bombs may have been intended to trigger
widespread conflicts between muslims and christians. The first two objectives
obviously succeeded. The third appears to have sought to deepen inter-faith
suspicions and hostility, and possibly trigger another round of mayhem
involving innocent muslims and christians. So far, both groups have remained
largely restrained, although there is justifiable anger among christians, and
fear of undeserved reprisals among muslims. Someone, somewhere is attempting to
pitch millions of muslims against millions of christians in a war where both
will be reluctant combatants, and losers.
The gruesome images and the pains of the losses and injuries from the Christmas
day bombings will shock and offend every civilized person. The deliberate
targeting of churches by people who claim that they are avenging the killing of
muslims last year will naturally inflame passions, and offend muslims who
recognise that their faith does not sanction the taking of innocent lives. The
anger and bitterness which is felt across the land over the mass killing of
people whose only crime appears to be their faith is only a step away from
violence against those suspected as supporters of the killers or those who
share their characteristics. The helplessness of the victims in Madallah, in
Jos and Potiskum and Damaturu reminds the nation of the victims of Jos, Zonkwa
and many other areas and conflicts where innocent people were murdered for
their faith alone.
The disclaimers by prominent muslims traditional rulers and clerics will have
some effect in terms of calming nerves, but they will also raise more questions
than answers. People will ask what influence these leaders and clerics have
over the muslim community they speak for, if they cannot limit or eliminate the
threats and the dangers posed by the bombers. The bombers of Christmas day who
claim to be Boko Haram say they bombed churches in retaliation against the
killing of muslims during last year’s Sallah celebrations in Jos. They claim
that neither the Muslim leadership nor the Nigerian state took steps to protect
the muslims in Jos or bring their killers to justice. In this manner, they
undermine the credibility of muslim leaders and the Nigeria state. A logical
question to ask is who is speaking for the Muslim community in Nigeria today?
Is it Boko Haram, which both fights the Nigeria state and places bombs which
kills innocent christians and muslims alike; or the mainstream leaders who
denounce their goals and tactics as un-Islamic? When Boko Haram bomb churches,
they expose millions of innocent muslims to retaliatory attacks, which
traditional leaders and Muslim clerics cannot prevent, or protect them from.
Attacks on muslims far from the theatre of conflicts will trigger more attacks
from muslims, and the vicious circle will be complete.
If the strategy of Boko Haram, or whoever is hiding behind its name and
grievances is to bring the Nigerians state to its knees, it could not have
found a better tactic than one which touches muslims and christians where they
hurt most, and mobilizes them in their largest numbers. No christian will fail
to feel anger at the killing of whole families who were just leaving a church
service on Christmas day. Their killers will remind the nation that muslims
were equally slaughtered at a mosque in Jos a few months ago on Sallah Day, an
event which angered all muslims. When the state fails to assume a firm control
over the situation by limiting anger after these killings, or apprehending
perpetrators, communities will be tempted to take revenge. Muslims have no
monopoly over bomb-making know-how, or weapons. They congregate five times
daily in millions of mosques across the nation, and are therefore even more
vulnerable to attacks. There are millions of muslims in every nook and cranny
of the nation, many living in isolation in communities far from their homes.
They are exposed, and vulnerable to attack from people who may think their
faith alone qualifies them for being murdered.
At this stage, it is clear that there is a plan to cause massive crises along
religious lines in Nigeria. It is time to ask some uncomfortable questions as
well. Could the scenario painted by a United State agency of the failure of the
Nigerian state be playing out? Is this attempt to push the Nigeria state to
fail being engineered by external forces? If so, what are the possible
objectives behind the plan? Is there a plan for a relatively crisis-free
break-up of the nation, or is the plan simply to cause massive and prolonged
crises between and within ethnic and religious groups? Is Nigeria’s
considerable oil and gas resource a factor in this attempt; and could some
interest out there be targeting exclusive control of this resource by
alienating the rest of the nation from it?
Even more sinister, it is legitimate to ask whether Boko Haram now merely
provides a cover for stronger and more sophisticated interest which is fighting
targets such as the U.S, Nigerian christians and the Nigerian state, using
Nigerian muslims as hostages. Is there some credibility to the suspicion that
Al Qa’ida in the Sahel has taken over the local grievances of Boko Haram, and
is now fighting for its own agenda, which has little to do with the real
interests of Nigerian muslims and other citizens? Or again, is there some
credibility to the suspicion that some sinister forces are milking the security
situation in our country for financial gains, and are sustaining the current
levels of hostility and fear using the cover and modus operandi of Boko Haram?
Tragically, there appears little effort towards identifying exactly what the
nature of the threat is. If there is one, government appears determined only to
throw technology and money at it. Hard political and security intelligence is
always difficult to come by in conflicts of this nature. Yet, hard intelligence
is precisely what the government needs to deal with this major threat, and it
has very little time to acquire it. The most imminent and dangerous fallout of
the Christmas bombings is that they will raise the levels of fear and anger
among most Nigerians. Many christians will be tempted to adopt a simple
position which links Boko Haram with all muslims, and will hold all muslims
responsible for Boko Haram’s atrocities. Muslims will reject the linkage, and
will in turn, claim that they are even more victims of Boko Haram than
christians. They will resent their religion being used as cover for un-islamic
activities, and will in turn claim that muslims are being killed in many parts
of the nation for being muslims alone, and the Nigerian state is
unwilling or unable to bring their killers to justice.
The most serious threat to the current situation, however, is the possibility
that the Nigerian state will lose its credibility as the protector of our
collective security. Whoever is behind these bombings and killings has
succeeded in casting major doubt in the minds of citizens over the ability of
this administration to protect both muslims and christians. If we cannot feel
and be protected, we may be tempted to protect ourselves. In a situation where
christians and muslims feel threatened by each other, it takes very little to
trigger a disastrous chain of events. In these days with so much anger and
passion, it is difficult to convince all Nigerians that muslims and christians
are all victims of this frightening wave of terror. The plan may be to get them
to engage in an unending blood-letting, but it it will be a war without a
victory. If they fight, they will be reluctant warriors. They do not need
to fight, it muslim leaders act and show even more openly that Boko Haram is
condemnable. They do not need to fight if Christian leaders do not make capital
out of the genuine grievances of their flock and urge them into a senseless
confrontation. But above all the nation does not need to take up arms against
itself if the government and leaders can take bold steps to plug the many
gaping holes around our security.
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