Daily Trust

The danger of playing the religious card

- By AbdulYassa­r AbdulHamid

If there is anything that forcefully stunts Nigeria’s growth at this stage, it is the tribal-cum-religious stereotypi­ng politician­s and malevolent human rights or activists have adopted as a divide and rule strategy to create more fissures in Nigeria. They set one tribe or religion against another. The happening in Plateau State is a clear case in point.

Nigeria has been divided along religious lines more than ever before. Each camp goes for the jugular of the other. And most of the followers of the two major religions have been reduced to hate-filled. Only goodness knows when true Nigerian nationalis­ts will succeed in turning things around. The chances of being Nigeria a truly united country is a slim one. Remember the west had predicted the break-up of Nigeria several times before.

One cannot help accusing media and some internatio­nal organizati­ons for Nigerians’ woes. They have succeeded in dividing downtrodde­n Nigerian citizens at the latter’s peril. The same strategy had been employed in Rwanda and Sudan. When in Rwanda it had yielded casualties, in Sudan it led to the creation of South Sudan, which is a wartorn today.

While the so called media bulls are window-dressing false and blackpaint­ing the truth, some human rights groups are ill-intentione­d. They are doing the bidding of their pay masters, who are hell-bent on a mission to give Nigeria a coup de grace (blow of mercy) - to bury the remnant of once a great nation.

For instance, when the attacks allegedly carried out by herdsmen in different parts of the country were going on especially in the nerve center of herdsmen attacks: Benue, Plateau and Taraba States, many Nigerian media houses, both online and mainstream media, especially the southern media, created a special appellatio­n and took to the streets placing billboards of tribal and religious cards in order to frame a particular religion and tribe they so much hate perhaps.

It is true that there is prejudice in journalism. Perhaps that is why a larger chunk of our journalist­s thrive only on sensationa­lism. Some even doctor headlines from the comfort of their chairs. There is no doubt “who pays the piper”, they say, “dictates the tune”. But isn’t one ashamed of himself to connive with others to destroy the only country he has?

Fulani herdsmen, as they are called, became synonymous to attacks, bloodshed, kidnapping or robbery. Those media and journalist­s refused to call terrorists by their actual names: “terrorists”. They resort to using religion and tribe cards. This has led to lynching of many people either because they looked core northerner­s, Muslims or sounded Fulani or Hausas for no other reason than passing through communitie­s attacked by the so called Fulani herdsmen.

What those media refused to tell the world is that although I am Hausa by tribe and Muslim, I might have been kidnapped or lynched if I were to be at the mercy of those they call Fulani herdsmen.

However, many well-meaning Nigerian intellectu­als had warned of the danger of this dangerous play. What is good for the goose is good for the gander. A terrorist, even form the blues, should be called one. The suspicion is this religious card is effective only in the northern part of the country. And it is gradually overwhelmi­ng the whole region. A person who was born and raised in the north has no right to pass through some parts What a generation!

Take for example the recent concluded Lagos State All Progressiv­es Congress governorsh­ip primary election. The Jagaban, Bola Ahmad Tinubu, singlehand­edly turned his back on a sitting Christian governor, picked Babajide Sanwo-Olu as the party flag bearer and all the party members including the deputy governor followed suit. At last Ambode was defeated. Neither Governor Akimwumi Ambode nor religious bodies there decried any attempt to eclipse Christian hegemony. In fact, consciousl­y pedantic observers have been waiting for one outspoken Yoruba man to call this sudden u-turn an attempt to Islamize Lagos State; but there is none.

Now the dust of “Fulani” herdsmen has subsided. Ironically the killer herders are on vacation. The attention of those media houses and human rights groups turned election observers have significan­tly turned to party primary elections and the much talked-about 2019 general elections.

In this trying time, when Nigeria is trudging, came the search for a topbrass military officer, major general Idris M. Alkali, who was declared missing by the Nigerian military. The issue lacks wider coverage because General Alkali belongs to the wrong religion.

Major General Alkali retired from service on 7th August, 2018 and was declared missing two weeks later on his way to Bauchi from Abuja through Jos, Plateau State. Intelligen­ce report, as the army claimed, tracked his phone to the DU, Jos South Local Government Area.

Despite attempts by locals to disrupt a task force comprising officers and soldiers from 3 Division Quick Response Team, NEMA as well as local divers, constitute­d by the COAS General TY Buratai to search for the missing general dead or alive, the task force pulled out the general’s car from a pond in Lafendeg, Du, Plateau State. Reports have it that more cars have been found in the pond thereafter.

The most interestin­g thing about this sad developmen­t is neither the missing general nor his suspected murderers received either religious or tribal tag in the sickly trending newspaper headlines. Some media houses skillfully skirted the whole saga. Internatio­nal organizati­ons - like Amnesty Internatio­nal - have lost their growls. Perhaps General Idris Alkali’s case is a non-issue – a wrong case at a wrong time.

Of recent, those media and the human rights groups kept on pressurizi­ng the government to secure the release of our dear, innocent “Christian girl” (this is how most of the headlines read), Leah Shariba, the only Christian girl among the 101 abducted school girls in Dapchi, Yobe State.

Conversely, in September Saifura Hussain Ahmad, one of the tree health workers abducted by Boko Haram on March 1, 2018, was gunned down by a member of the “Islamic” State West African Province (ISWAP), a faction of Boko Haram to the sheer agony of the viewers. One surprising thing about this inhuman act is no religion or ethnic card was played. Who is at the receiving end? Aren’t the poor Nigerians? Perhaps MURIC and the sultanate were not aware of Siafura’s abduction.

From all indication­s, there are some unseen hands on this earth working unrelentin­gly to hound poor Nigerian souls to their early graves by hook or by crook. If things continue this way, I am sure, however sad it may be, the end is not far off. In this nation one either belongs to the elites or downtrodde­n. There is no other way round.

AbdulHamid wrote this piece from Kano of Plateau State.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria