With
manipulation of religion and ethnicity, among other factors, by some
Nigerian elite as a major reason responsible for the violence and wanton
killings across the country, the conclusive prosecution of the
perpetrators has become absolutely necessary, Peace Obi reports
Down
the drain it flows; the blood of Nigerians who were neither paying the
ultimate price for one heinous crime or the other nor was it their
choice to end their lives gruesomely, but were unfortunately caught up
by some vampires in the land. The marauders who obviously are inspired
by hate, mutual suspicion, unforgiveness, tribal and religious
intolerance, have little or no regard for human life, hence the orgy of
violence in the land. Since 2009 till date, the country has witnessed so
much bloodshed arising from Boko Haram terrorists attacks, herdsmen
attacks, erroneous bombing of Rann IDP camp , IPOB protests, among
others.
Available
statistics has it that not less 20,000 people have lost their lives in
the war between Nigerian Army and the Boko Haram terrorists since 2009
till date, with 2.3 million displaced from their homes. And according to
United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF),
as at last year, up to one million children have been forced out of
school by Boko Haram. The above only gives one a fair idea of what the
country and her citizens are losing in terms of human life from one out
of the Dracula groups in the country. The physical and psychological
pain, human and material losses of these attacks on the nation are
unquantifiable.
Warning
on the danger of unabated killings in the Southern Kaduna, Ondo State
Governor Olusegun Mimiko said that the shedding of innocent blood in the
country could further worsen the country’s economic situation. “We
cannot be praying for economic progress, if we continue to shed the
blood of innocent people,” he said.
Knowingly
or unknowingly, the history of the country is being written in the
hearts of the today’s youths, who if care is not taken will in due
course play out what was handed over to them. With the seed of hate,
reprisal attacks, tribal and religious intolerance, mistrust sown
through the various wanton killings in the country, it behoves
government at all levels and stakeholders to urgently rise to the
challenge of quelling the current disturbing killings with impunity. The
future consequences of today’s injustice, oppression and maiming of a
particular ethnic group or religious group can be nipped in the bud by
summoning the political will and the moral burden to stop the impunity
of killing under any disguise. Indeed, today’s Nigerian children and
youths have not only heard tales of pogrom in the country but have seen
it with their own eyes. And so much has equally registered in their
minds. What with such attacks and the subsequent massacre in places like
Agatu in
Benue State, Uzo Uwani in Enugu State, Taraba, Delta, Edo states and several others.
Responding
to the killings in Southern Kaduna recently and in a manner that tends
to shift away from the seeming culture of silence that has greeted the
herdsmen dastardly acts, the Senate President, Bukola Saraki, noted that
the upper chamber had resolved to set up a committee to carry out a
holistic investigation into the killings. Condemning the barbaric
killings in the various communities of Southern Kaduna by suspected
Fulani herdsmen, the Senate President said, “We condemn in totality the
depravity being exhibited on the streets of Kafanchan. The Senate will
not pay lip service to it, neither will it sit idly by and watch
innocent Nigerians being slaughtered on the basis of their religion,
ethnic group or political persuasion.”
Describing
the spate of killings in the country as unbearable, the Speaker of the
House of Representatives, Mr. Yakubu Dogara, said that different arms
of government must be alive to their duties. According to him, an
enduring solution to the wanton waste of lives and property in the
country would start with leaders accepting responsibility. And that with
genuine efforts devoid of sectional, religious and tribal sentiments on
the part of leaders at different levels, would guarantee communities
free of the marauders.
“Many
developments in the polity require legislative and executive responses.
An enduring solution can only be attained if all of us – Northerners,
Southerners, Christians, Muslims, politicians, the apolitical,
traditionally rulers and religious leaders – accept the fact that we are
responsible and rise to confront and rid our communities of these
evils.”
In
a motion sponsored by the Senator representing Kaduna South in the
National Assembly, Danjuma La’ah noted that “since 2011, various
communities in Southern senatorial district of Kaduna State have been
consistently attacked by herdsmen, resulting in deaths, injuries, loss
of property and displacement of the communities.
“In
Kaduna, 808 persons were killed in 53 villages across four councils,
while 57 were injured, farm produce estimated at N5.5 billion destroyed
and 1,422 houses and 16 churches burnt.
“In
the last one year, we have witnessed a harvest of killings by these
marauding herdsmen with several cases of massacre in Agatu, Benue State;
Uzo Uwani, Enugu State, with several attacks in Taraba, Delta and Edo
states, to mention a few.”
With
the upper and lower chambers of the National Assembly rending their
voices in decrying the evil pervading the country, the earlier call made
by the Primate of All Nigeria Anglican Communion, Most Reverend
Nicholas Okoh still begs for government’s attention. The Primate had in
November last year called on government to investigate and prosecute
those responsible for the barbaric attacks in several Christian
communities in Southern part of Kaduna State. The Primate, oblivious of
the greater danger and misfortune that would befall the Christian
community had called on government’s intervention. And should government
have heeded the voice of the Primate among the numerous voices calling
for its intervention, story would have been different.
Speaking
during the 27th anniversary of the Abuja Diocese of the Anglican
Communion, the Primate, had also urged government to increase security
across the country. And describing then the spate of killings in the
Southern Kaduna as embarrassing to the nation, the Primate urged
government to rise to its responsibility of protecting lives and
property, adding that the then renewed killings by some faceless group
of murderers were signs of federal government’s failure to rise up to
the essence of governance.
“The
government is responsible for the protection of the people. That is the
essence of governance. So, I call on the leadership of the country to
bear in mind that protecting the people from external and internal
aggressors is the reason people voted for them. So they should rise to
that mandate and protect the people,” Okoh said.
Lamenting
on the manipulative use of religion by some northern elites,
the Catholic Bishop of Sokoto Diocese, Mathew Hassan Kukah in Abuja
recently said, “Unless we get round to defining what constitutes
religion and in this particular case, the way and manner in which the
northern ruling class continues to use religion as a cover to perpetuate
and subjugate the people, the problem will persist.”
The
bishop revealed that with the feelings in some quarters that people
could kill in the name of religion, the hope of having anybody
prosecuted for religious violence may not be in sight. “We may never
prosecute anybody for killing in the name of religion, precisely because
we have been unable to separate criminality from religion.”
Speaking
further, Kukah, noted that “The dangerous crimes that have been
associated with religion in any part of the North have never been as a
result of theological differences or disputation, it has always been
economic.
“In
Zango Kataf, it was the siting of a market, while in Bauchi, it was
about someone being accused of using pork as suya. None of the conflicts
started in the church or mosque. They are largely about economic
opportunities. In northern Nigeria, schools that were built by the
Catholics in Kaduna have now been given names of Muslim heroes and
heroines. Would anybody take over a school built by Muslims in Nigeria
and turn it into either St. Thomas or St. Margaret,” he queried.
Expressing
his concerns on the inability of the country to record a conclusive
prosecution of cases arising from religious violence and other high
profile murder cases, the Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, said very few
people have been prosecuted for religious violence but none has been
brought to conclusion. Asking rhetorically, Osinbajo said, “why are such
cases never concluded? Too many cases of high profile murders that are
not concluded in this country,” he said.
Stating
that religion has been a veritable tool in the development of the
nation’s education, the Vice President however hinted that “the
manipulation of religion by the elites has led to the problem that we
are facing. Nigerian elites will use religion when it is convenient and
at other times they may use ethnicity or some other form of
identification.
“It
is that frequent use of religion for manipulative tendencies that has
led to our predicament. And this is because we always discuss the issues
after conflicts where lives are lost and it thus make such discussions
emotive.
“Identification leads to advancement and so the elite resort to religious and ethnic manipulation,” Osinbajo said.
“Identification leads to advancement and so the elite resort to religious and ethnic manipulation,” Osinbajo said.
Against
the backdrop of the Southern Kaduna killings, the Nobel
Laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka condemned government’s delayed reaction
to the orgy of violence in the area. Calling on Nigerians to desist
from religious bigotry, Soyinka warned that unless Nigeria moderates the
growing fanatical approach to issues, the country may not move forward
as a nation.
“If
we do not tame religion in Nigeria, religion will kill us. Many
Nigerians have paid the ultimate price because of religion and religion
is now embedded in our society.”
Soyinka
who decried the Kaduna State Governor’s admission of paying the
perpetrators of the Southern Kaduna’s carnage to possibly prevent the
attacks, said, “What astonished me was not the admission by the governor
but the astonishment of others at such governmental response to
atrocity. There was nothing new about it. Has appeasement to religious
forces not become a Nigerian face of justice and equity? First lethargy
and then appeasement. Wasn’t Boko Haram’s Muhammed Yusuf a beneficiary
of appeasement in a similar fashion?
“If
you ask why General Buhari did not act fast enough when these events
take place, which degrade us as human beings, well it is perhaps he has
been waiting for the governor of that state to send money to the killers
first for them to stop the killing.
“What,
however, concerns the rest of us no matter the internal wrangling,
rivalries or controversies within any religion, is that the innocent are
often those who pay the highest price. The non-adherents to one line of
belief or another,” he said.
Expressing sadness
over the loss of lives and property in the recent Southern Kaduna
killings, the Sultan of Sokoto and President-General of the Nigerian
Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs (NSCIA), Alhaji Muhammad Sa’ad
Abubakar III, described as unjust, heinous and dastard the acts of
destructions of lives and property in Southern Kaduna.
The
Sultan who in a statement from the Director of Administration, NSCIA
Ustaz Christian Isa Okonkwo, said, “the NSCIA denounces these events in
entirety particularly because they run contrary to fundamental Islamic
law which ordains human life to be sacred and strongly forbids its
unlawful destruction except for a just cause.”
And
calling on the Federal Government and the Governor of Kaduna State,
Nasir el-Rufai to urgently step into the situation with the view to
finding lasting solution to the crisis in the area, the Sultan said,
“The NSCIA would like the federal and Kaduna State governments to go a
step further by proffering lasting solutions to these recurrent acts of
hatefulness and savagery in Southern Kaduna.
“We
also wish to call on the federal government to objectively investigate
the matter and prosecute whoever that is found guilty irrespective of
the person’s tribe, creed and/or social status,” the statement read.
The
Sultan equally urged all Nigerians not to allow themselves be used by
forces of evil hiding behind tribal, political or even religious
disguise to perpetrate evils in the society.
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