Daily Trust

Banditry: Govs, Senators, service chief’s silence, is this anarchy?

- By Prof. Usman Yusuf

Today, I write about the worsening and never-ending insecurity and blood letting in Northern Nigeria (Arewa) and the deafening silence of many of us who should speak up loud and clearly on behalf of our voiceless people.

President Muhammadu Buhari came into power thanks to the loyal support, trust and goodwill of the masses particular­ly in Arewa. They gave their money, blood, sweat, tears and for some, their lives to elect him in 2015 and re-elect him in 2019. When he laid sick in hospital in the U.K., millions kept vigil praying for his recovery. The masses simply trusted his integrity and saw in him a leader that would correct the wrongs and set this nation on a path to progress.

Arewa today is under siege and terrorized by rampaging bandits and insurgents. They roll into our towns and villages in convoys of motorcycle­s riding three on each, brandishin­g AK47 rifles with impunity. They spend hours killing, burning, raping, carting away livestock and abducting women as sex slaves. In many of these villages, they put taxes on the people and keep coming back again and again to attack because there is no law enforcemen­t presence to protect them. The police or military always show up after the carnage to count the bodies.

How these bunch of ragtag bandits on motorcycle­s wielding nothing more than rusty AK47 rifles can roam the land with impunity causing these much deaths and destructio­ns in a nation with a standing army and air force should be a reason for serious national reflection on our entire security apparatus. The nation must ask the tough questions of weather the current military leadership has run out of ideas to get the job done. Nigerians are sick and tired of this blood letting and mayhem and want it stopped now; nothing more nothing less.

I recently watched two video clips that brought tears to my eyes. These videos are a testament to our failings as a society to our own people but, most importantl­y, of the failure of this government to protect the lives, honour and dignity of those we hold dear and sacred; our women folk and families. Forgive me for being clinical in describing these women’s ordeal but it is the reality of the lives of our women under this siege.

The first video is of a young nursing mother from a village in Katsina narrating how she was raped by armed bandits in front of her husband and teenage son. You could see the silent rage on the face of the teenage son who was standing nearby. Her husband was too distraught and ashamed to be shown.

The second video was of a woman from a village in Borno crying and pleading with the visiting governor to protect them from Boko Haram. She told him that the insurgents would come to their village several days in a week raping women. You could see the fear and anguish on her face.

From Adamawa to Zamfara, the death toll all across Arewa is mounting. Images of the massacres are too gruesome to watch and the stories from survivors too heartbreak­ing to hear but, hearing and watching we must, because this is the reality under which our people have been living silently for years. The roll call of the nameless dead are too numerous to count; neither the federal nor state government­s keep any records of the number of people killed, injured, kidnapped, women raped or cattle rustled.

The president seems distant, uncaring and out of touch with the sufferings of his largest support base. It has never been in his nature to commiserat­e or empathize with people in real time in their hours of need. He does not send delegation to condole with the people, or leaders of the communitie­s affected.

Contrast that with the vice president’s response to the killing in July 2019 of Funke Olakunrin, the 58-year-old daughter of Reuben Fasoranti the leader of the Yoruba group, Afenifere. The vice president flew to Akure, Ondo State, to condole the family. He also flew to Zaria, Kaduna State, to condole the family of Precious Owolabi, the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) member hit by a stray bullet in Abuja during a Shiites protest on July 22, 2019.

Governors in Arewa have essentiall­y become governors of condolence­s in their states. They all appear helpless with many literally blackmaile­d into negotiatin­g with these murderous bandits. There is a picture on social media that made me cringe. Though it was touted as a disarmamen­t process with the bandits terrorizin­g the state, the picture clearly tells who was in charge. It showed the state governor, a senior military officer and a bandit brandishin­g his AK47 in the middle. For goodness sake, you do not negotiate with unrepentan­t rapists, mass murderers, kidnappers, arsonists and cattle rustlers, instead, you bring them to swift justice.

The threat of famine in Nigeria is real and almost certain if the federal government does not take urgent and serious security measures that will protect our people to go back to their farms. In all the states terrorised by these bandits, they choose the most fertile parts of the state to terrorise farmers off their farms. Food insecurity in addition to current insecurity of lives and properties will be a disaster and a serious threat to our national security and existence as a Nation.

Arewa’s message to Mr. President:

(a). We are under siege by armed terrorists; (b). Our land is drenched in blood; (c). There are mass burials all over the region; (d). Our women are being raped by bandits; (e). Our people are held captive in forests all across the region; (f ). Our traditiona­l rulers are being killed

(g). Our livestock have been rustled; (h). We have been made poorer by terrorists; (i). Our farmers are not safe to till the land; (j). Our people are displaced to IDP camps; (l). There is growing anger in the land. and (m). Now is the time for urgent action.

Arewa’s collective silence to these injustices is a bigger tragedy than the terror and cruelty that these murderers visit daily on our people. In the name of God who created us all, I call on all men and women of conscience to speak up loud and clearly against these injustices and our government’s inability to stop the bloodshed. Let us not forget that we will surely be asked to account for what we did when our people were being kidnapped, killed, maimed, raped, abducted, their houses razed down and displaced from their ancestral homes.

Usman Yusuf is a Professor of Haematolog­y-Oncology and Bone Marrow Transplant­ation.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria