All Progressives Congress (APC)
national leader Asiwaju Ahmed Bola Tinubu yesterday identified five solutions
to the Boko Haram insurgency.
He said the dreaded sect is the
greatest security challenge to Nigerian since the civil war 40 years ago.
Tinubu said so far, government
policy on tackling the problem has been unimaginative and mainly a one
dimensional military approach.
The Goodluck Jonathan
administration, he said, implements its own policy half-heartedly; resulting in
the sect’s evil spreading geographically, with its operations becoming more
complex.
The former Lagos State governor, in
a statement, said government policy needs reform in five important ways.
First, he said the government must
admit its solely military approach is inadequate, as Boko Haram’s challenge has
economic, political and social dimensions that have been ignored at Nigeria’s
collective national peril.
Second, he said to address the
non-military aspects of the crisis, government needs to reach out to the North,
especially those areas most blighted by terrorism.
Tinubu said that region now suffers
severe economic depression, and that he believes only a small minority of
people actually support Boko Haram.
The real problem, Tinubu said, is
that most people in the affected areas think ill of the government and are thus
indifferent to the fight between government and the sect.
“Despite Boko Haram’s homicidal
ways, the population does not see government as coming to their rescue.
“They see government as another
layer of suffering and oppression. Until government breaks this perception, it
will have a hard time breaking the back of Boko Haram,” Tinubu said.
According to him, the most effective
way to counter this impression is through a development plan for the North,
under which the government will inaugurate infrastructural development that not
only creates a platform for economic growth, but will provide employment for
many young men.
Such legitimate employment, Tinubu
said, will lessen the pool of desperate youth from which Boko Haram recruits
its foot soldiers.
“Deplete the numbers of recruits and
you diminish the group’s ability to operate. Also, this policy builds goodwill
among the people,” Tinubu said, adding that ultimately, it is the people who
will defeat Boko Haram when they see government as their ally and true
guardian.
Tinubu’s third solution is the need
to refine military operations, which he described as clumsy.
“The military’s hand has been too
heavy and indiscriminate. It has committed abuses against the innocent in its
clumsy attempt to pursue Boko Haram. These offenses only increase the pool of
disaffected people from which Boko Haram recruits.
“To be seen as the true protectors
of the people, government security forces must restrain themselves so that they
do not lash out in frustration against innocent people for the harm Boko Haram
has done,” he said.
The fourth solution, according to
Tinubu, is that the government must improve its intelligence-gathering
capacity.
This, he said, is partly a function
of the people’s disposition toward government, as their distrust makes them
reticent to provide information.
“All intelligence gathering is first
local. There is a lot of sense in the community policing in Western nations
where the police is welded to the community and security is every citizen’s
business.
“In our case, I am afraid, security
have alienated the locals and in that process shut the door to the floor of
useful information about the dangerous gang.”
Finally, Tinubu said a regional
summit is needed as the Boko Haram challenge has a regional dimension. He said
elements of terrorism are now trafficked across borders.
“As the largest nation in West
Africa and the nation most affected by this problem, Nigeria has the standing
to convene a regional summit to discuss with our neighbors ways to end this
problem before it becomes a hot and pressing issue for our neighbors as well,”
he said.
On the abduction of girls from the
Government Secondary School in Chibok, Borno State, Tinubu said their
disappearance shows a lack of contingent planning by the government.
He said most major militaries around
the world have developed plans for major challenges, adding that it is a
terrible lapse that Nigeria’s security apparatus failed to make such plans.
He also questioned the response on
the ground the day the girls were seized, saying such abduction is logistically
a major operation that takes planning and execution.
“How is it that Boko Haram is better
at planning and execution than our trained professional security agencies? How
could this have taken place without detection and a rapid response?” he asked.
Tinubu urged President Jonathan to
talk to Nigerians on the issue. “The nation is in anguish yet the president has
not talked to us directly.
“Let him make a broadcast to the
nation at this time of hurt and pain to assure us, in broad terms, that he has
a plan to free our daughters.
“He did not give us operation
details but he needs to more actively and visibly lead the nation at this
time,” Tinubu said.
The APC national leader said he was
not seeking to take advantage of the security situation to score a political
point.
“No matter what and no matter who is
in office, our security should never sink below to a level where widespread
death and destruction can descend on us with impunity…
“While I have no interest in
partisan bickering at the moment, I also cannot allow the mere fact of my
political affiliation to silence me on this transcendent issue. All Nigerians
have a right and responsibility to let their voice be heard on this matter,” he
said.
Tinubu said many non-Muslims would
see Boko Haram as an Islamic assault, but that the sect’s activities make a
mockery of his faith.
“I am Muslim and abhor Boko Haram
for it mocks not honors the tenets of my faith. There is nothing Islamic there
except that it uses the legitimacy of Islam to lure the ignorant, gullible and
hopeless into their sordid trap.
“Boko Haram exalts violence, not
God. It kills Muslim and Christian alike because its faith is not Islam but
mayhem and lawlessness,” he said.
According to him, without the
extreme poverty and the great disparity between wealthy and the poor, Boko
Haram would be a small fringe movement capable of nothing except petty crime
and making periodic noise.
“Government policy has been
ineffectual. If it maintains this present form, government policy will continue
to be ineffectual. This means the situation will either remain the same or
deteriorate, with the latter being more likely. Either road is impassable if the
objective of our trek is a better Nigeria.
“Some now say parts of Nigeria are
ungovernable. I disagree. The issue is not that parts of the nation are
ungovernable. The real problem is that the current administration seems
incapable of governing these and other areas.
“No parts of the nation are
ungovernable. All sections are amenable to good governance if only good
governance were to be had. Trouble commences where there is bad or no
governance.
“This government, by folly or
omission, has done too little good. It has lost legitimacy among segments of
the population. While it may hold predominant power and money, this government
is approaching the point where it is morally spent.
“This government is a bumbling
monument to barren policy and corrupt practices. Given the obvious danger
before us, may this government regain sobriety and a sense of purpose equal to
the moment and the challenge we face,” Tinubu said.
Source The Nation Written by Joseph
Jibueze
How To End Insurgency, By Tinubu
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Tuesday, May 06, 2014
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