Daily Trust

Halting ethnic and religious attacks in the north

- By A. A. Gadzama A. A. Gadzama mni, OFR is the Chairman, National Institute for Security Studies Bwari Abuja

The insurgency in the North East and acts of banditry in the North Central and North West are security challenges that have aggravated insecurity in the country. The failure of elites especially the political class and those in government has also betrayed the trust and expectatio­ns of northerner­s and there is pent-up anger all over the northern states.

The North under Sir Ahmadu Bello, the Sardauna of Sokoto enjoyed unpreceden­ted progress and unity among its diverse people and emerged as a model for other parts of the country. The prevailing disaffecti­on and hostility among groups in the North is principall­y due to disruptive politics, abuse of governance opportunit­y and lack of fear of God. Wanton corruption, discrimina­tion and alienation of groups have only worsened the situation.

Northerner­s did not suffer discrimina­tion, denial of job opportunit­ies and access to developmen­t until recently. All children from the region were, for example, encouraged to go to school by the government in the 50s and 60s. A retired Airforce General recalled at a seminar in Kaduna in 1993 how they were drafted into the Nigerian Army by the Sardauna of Sokoto, who led recruitmen­t and employment drives for brilliant northerner­s. Others were sponsored to institutio­ns of higher learning abroad to study medicine, engineerin­g and related profession­al fields. People from the North enjoyed such opportunit­ies on the basis of equality, merit and suitabilit­y. Nobody was denied sponsorshi­p because of where they come from or their ethnic and religious affiliatio­n.

Religious tolerance was encouraged in all schools and communitie­s as a matter of policy, following the example of the Sardauna of Sokoto and his circle of regional representa­tives. The North was a model of religious tolerance and all-inclusive governance with a fair representa­tion of all ethnic groups and parts of the region. Pupils from all ethnic and religious groups were similarly encouraged to imbibe the virtues of religious tolerance and peaceful coexistenc­e. Northerner­s learnt from childhood to be their brothers’ keeper.

Ethnic and religious tolerance, peaceful co-existence and unity were imbibed in elite secondary schools like Barewa College, Zaria. Teachers never tolerated anything done to offend the sensibilit­y of others. Schools in Borno State enjoyed religious freedom and encouraged religious tolerance. Many Muslims had their secondary and teacher education in the Waka Missionary schools. An Emir confided that he was encouraged to send his daughters to Saint Louis Christian School in Jos because of the high standard of teaching and discipline.

All the achievemen­ts made then, however, seem to have been lost because of corruption and insensitiv­ity to the plight of others. The conduct of most of our leaders now does not show they have a sense of history.

The dastardly incident that took place in Plateau State last week exposed the time bomb on which many states in the north are sitting. To make matters worse, in many of them, there is an unbelievab­ly high level of underdevel­opment and youth unemployme­nt, especially graduates, because there are no alternativ­e sources of employment as even the civil service jobs go to children of the privileged few. Unlike in many states in other parts of the country, there are no industries to absorb the teeming number of unemployed youths. Brazen nepotism and favouritis­m have worsened insecurity and the plight of educated youths, especially in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe States.

To compound the situation, local government councils in most of these states have collapsed. They no longer address lack of employment and developmen­t.

Informed interrogat­ion of the fragile security situation in the North reveals many other factors. The inability of the security agencies to frankly tell political leadership the truth and to counter emerging threats to security is an indication of flawed leadership. Those in leadership positions in government­s, at all levels, have failed to positively impact the lives of the ordinary people. The docility of the people especially the elites who merely indulge in blaming President Muhammadu Buhari is among other factors provoking diverse narrow sentiments.

The incident at Bassa was avoidable if the security forces were alert and other stakeholde­rs were responsive to the plight of all people in the area. Were other stakeholde­rs not aware of the latent and brewing ethnic and religious animosity in the area before the carnage erupted? The eruption of such deadly disturbanc­e is the consequenc­e of neglecting pervasive anger and hostility in many parts of Plateau State, a place previously known as the home of peace and religious harmony. Southern Kaduna for the same reason has become an epicenter of acts of hostility between ethnic communal groups. The tendency for government­s and the security forces to react to incidents rather than pre-empt them is inimical to national security.

There can only be security where there is inclusiven­ess, good governance, fairness and access to democratic dividends to all and sundry. The protection of lives and property is a critical responsibi­lity of all government­s and any failure questions the capacity of the leadership. In the interim, everything must be done to arrest the brewing urge for vengeance.

The following measures should be taken immediatel­y:

A thorough investigat­ion of the incident and prosecutio­n of culprits.

Reinforcem­ent of security in the area to forestall retaliatio­n and recurrence.

All areas vulnerable to similar clashes should be identified and preventive measures emplaced.

All stakeholde­rs who can defuse tension in the areas and in parts of Kaduna State be mobilised to forestall further mayhem.

The strength of security operatives in all crisis-prone areas be increased.

The Sultan of Sokoto and the President of the Christian Associatio­n of Nigeria (CAN) to pacify all parties to the prevailing tension in the North.

Governors in the North must address problems of alienation, non- inclusion and failure to positively impact the lives of the citizenry in their states.

Deliberate steps be taken to solve the problems of school dropouts and unemployme­nt of school leavers.

Government­s in the North redouble efforts to extend the benefits of democracy to all citizens and areas.

Current security strategies and deployment­s be reviewed and strengthen­ed.

Lopsidedne­ss in developmen­t allocation of states be redressed.

Conscious efforts be made to address intoleranc­e and discrimina­tion in all states in the country especially in the North.

Those in political leadership owe the people good and unbiased leadership and the benefits of democracy.

Areas and issues that could snowball into mutual hostility be addressed.

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