Daily Trust Sunday

UNICEF seeks unconditio­nal release of Kagara students

- From Hassan Ibrahim, Bauchi

The United Nations Children Fund (UNICEF) has condemned attacks on schools and calls for the immediate and unconditio­nal release of kidnapped students of Government Science College, Kagara, Niger State.

A statement signed by the representa­tive of UNICEF in Nigeria, Peter Hawkins and made available to newsmen in Bauchi noted, “The UNICEF is deeply concerned about these reported acts of violence. Attacks on schools are a violation of children’s rights. Children should feel safe at home and school at all times, and parents should not need to worry for the safety of their children when they send them off to school.’’

The statement further noted that the organisati­on was aware of reports that many students were unaccounte­d.

In 1903 about a hundred years after the Jihad of 1804, British colonizing forces toppled the ancien Sokoto caliphate establishe­d by Othman dan Fodio following the defeat of Sultan Mohammed Attahiru in a place called Mbormi located in present day Gombe state. Rather than stay under British rule, Sultan Attahiru had chosen to flee to Sudan as did many of his followers and on his way the British caught up and killed him in a skirmish that followed.

This developmen­t set the stage for the trajectory of most of the current issues that collective­ly make up the Fulani question in Nigeria.

First of all with the coming of the British, the Fulani political and social aristocrac­y could no longer claim to be the exclusive masters of Northern Nigeria. That pride of place now resided with the British who proceeded to subsume the caliphate under the supervisin­g authority of the British colonial administra­tion. And although the British pragmatica­lly decided to leave much of native administra­tion in the hands of the Fulani aristocrac­y, they however took it upon themselves to tinker heavily with the ruling structure and content of the Fulani dominated native administra­tion.

Secondly whereas the pre-colonial caliphate was driven largely by the ideologica­l and doctrinal tenets of the Islamic faith, the caliphate under British colonial even as it lay claim to deriving its ideologica­l direction from Islam, was to all intents and purposes and appendage of the Christian British colonial order from whence it derived its raison d’etre.

Out of this arose a fundamenta­l contradict­ion of identity and relevance of the Fulani dominated caliphate under British colonial rule.

Can the caliphate continue to justifiabl­y claim to uphold the tenets of Islam as its mission when it pledges allegiance and loyalty to the Christian British colonial power?

Essentiall­y this is the kernel of the Fulani question in Nigeria.

The Emirate system designed by the British was ostensibly meant to strengthen the power of the Fulani aristocrac­y, but it also turned them into an appendage of the British principall­y to serve its colonial interest in Nigeria thus alienating them from the original Islamic identity and relevance that Usman dan Fodio meant them to be. In the process the emergent Fulani political aristocrac­y under the British designed Emirate system gradually began to lose touch with their essence and their mission in the context of the new Nigeria emerging under colonial rule.

The most obvious corollary of this developmen­t was the growing disconnect between urban based Fulani political aristocrac­y who become culturally and socially integrated into the urban Hausa society and structure they had supplanted on the one hand; and the pastoral, nomadic Fulani who to a large extent chose to remain and retain their original way of life contemptuo­usly shunning what they see as dilution of their tradition and way of life.

This was in contrast to the pre-colonial caliphate, where the pastoral Fulanis were all too inspired and eager to identify and join the crusading Islamic efforts of Usman dan Fodio in their droves, in the process converting and practicing the Islamic faith.

Dr Aliyu Tilde in his seminal article lamented that over the years as a result of this divergence the Fulani ethnicity have come to run on two speeds separate and increasing­ly unequal in all ramificati­ons of life; the urban based Fulani aristocrac­y with their social status and political power on the one hand, and the pastoralis­ts and nomadic Fulani on the other with both contemptuo­us of each other.

The crisis of identity and relevance is more pronounced among the urban based Fulani aristocrac­y. They are Fulani by linguistic and ethnic definition, but having integrated fully into the Hausa culture over the years they are more of the latter. They claim and try to justify their status as custodians of Islamic doctrine and tenets but they are largely a creation of and identify more with their Christian British creators in virtually all aspects of life.

Mired in this profound crisis of identity and relevance the Fulani aristocrac­y have found it difficult to connect and concretely justify the religious leadership it claims as its essence; and also to even find and plant its foot firmly and permanentl­y in the Nigerian political firmament.

The Fulanis have thus collective­ly become prisoner to their history. The Urban Fulani aristocrac­y justifies its status and power dating back to 1804 when Othman dan Fodio led the Fulanis to take over Northern Nigeria. The pastoralis­t and nomadic Fulani by the same token have also come to believe that Northern Nigeria and by extension Nigeria is theirs by the same conquest of 1804 thus giving them the unchalleng­ed right to establish and practice their way of life everywhere in Nigeria regardless. Between the urban Fulani and pastoral nomadic Fulani there has thus developed a misplaced superiorit­y complex over other Nigerians which they both strive to justify as a matter of historical right. Thus many among the Fulani elite will for instance justify open grazing of livestock and the primitive conditions of pastoral and nomadic Fulanis on the altar of defending what they believe is a way of life that other Nigerians which they regard as being of less cultural and historical pedigree than the Fulanis are not qualified to ask.

If discerning Fulanis are aware of the dysfunctio­nality in their society their attitude to it has not been helpful to the Fulani cause generally.

For all their political and social status in Nigeria, the urban Fulani have done very little to improve the lot of the pastoral and nomadic Fulani. Indeed the first serious attempt to provide a template for the integratio­n of pastoral and nomadic life was through education was provided by an Igboman Professor Chima Uzoma of the University of Jos. That was before Professor Jibril Aminu followed it up as a national policy which unfortunat­ely was abandoned.

Failure through acts of omission and commission by the urban Fulani aristocrat­s over the years to initiate the integratio­n of the nomadic Fulani into the emerging modern Nigerian society lies at the root of the Fulani question raging in Nigeria today. The issue has now been exacerbate­d by the external factors of climate change and population growth leading to paucity of grazing lands to support the nomadic life of the pastoral Fulani. There is also the gradual breakdown of their socio-cultural fabric which results in further alienating the nomadic Fulani from their urban kith and Kin as well as the larger Nigerian society of non-Fulanis.

Some among the pastoral Fulanis have reacted to these developmen­ts by resorting to what is now attributed to them. They simply do not care a damn about a country that they are largely alienated from and which views them and their ways with contempt. A country they feel ought to be theirs to own and use without let or hindrance by virtue of what they believe was their conquest of it in 1804.

Without doubt the Fulani question is the most challengin­g in the country at the moment not least being the fact that the Fulanis are the most politicall­y prominent ethnicity in Nigeria. And the starting point to its resolution must come from the politicall­y powerful Fulani elite in Nigeria. For their sake and Nigeria’s they must make the effort to free themselves from being continuous hostage to their history which deprives them from facing the challenges of our contempora­ry life as Nigerians collective­ly. (Concluded)

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