The Guardian (Nigeria)

Who and where are the criminals?

- By Anthony Cardinal Olubunmi Okogie

accountabl­e, owe Nigerians some credible explanatio­ns.

The recent terrorist acts of herdsmen and the way the federal government has reacted—its spokespers­ons and the security agencies—bear a disturbing resemblanc­e to the issue of dramatized parade of suspects. The laws of this country were broken by those who butchered citizens of Nigeria the way they would butcher their cows. First, the reactions of leaders of Miyetti Allah, by way of self-implicatio­n, did little to hide the identity of the criminals. Secondly, government officials came up with contradict­ory explanatio­ns.

Some government officials blamed it on the fact that the herdsmen were not treated as Nigerian brothers. We were told the herdsmen acted in such unparallel­ed barbarism because they were not accommodat­ed by their fellow Nigerians. We were treated to the tale that the herdsmen committed such heinous crimes because of a law made by a state government. We were told, by the Inspector General of Police, that the killings were consequenc­es of communal clashes. In other words, clashes among communitie­s of Nigerians. The Minister of Defence, for his part, even went as far as painting the picture of murderous herdsmen as Nigerians denied access to grazing route by farmers. Then, in grotesque contradict­ion, the Directorat­e of State Security said perpetrato­rs of this crime were not Nigerian herdsmen but members of the Islamic State in West Africa.

Officials of the Federal Government cannot, on the one hand, say these butchers are Nigerians in need of accommodat­ion by fellow Nigerians, and, on the other hand, turn around and say they are foreigners. The two explanatio­ns amount to a simple fault of logic. No public office holder who offers such explanatio­ns deserves to spend one more minute in office. He should either tender his resignatio­n or be fired. He cannot be counted upon to secure the people.

But apart from the fact that such utterances insult the intelligen­ce of Nigerians, they beg the issue. The issue is neither the nationalit­y nor the ethnic affiliatio­n nor the religious identity of the herdsmen. The issue is the crime they committed. In Nigeria, the crime of murder is punishable by law. Our government cannot pretend not to know who the criminals are. The issue is: where are the criminals? Why have leaders of Miyetti Allah not been called in for interrogat­ion?

Since security is de facto in the hands of the federal government, these are questions the government has a non-negotiable moral obligation to answer. Setting up a committee to prevent a reoccurren­ce is a good idea. But that does not justify the fact that these murderers are still walking and talking freely.

It is cruel and cynical to subject security matters to the manipulati­on of our religious and ethnic difference­s. It is utterly unbecoming of statesmen to prioritize political calculatio­ns over the value of life and property. Every Nigerian citizen is special. The rights that belong to us by virtue of being human beings and citizens are to be protected at all times.

It is no longer news that our country has become a bye-word in the comity of nations. The internatio­nal community looks with wonder at a country so tall on promise but short on delivery. The way our government mishandles matters of security gives the rest of the world the impression that we cannot govern ourselves. Little wonder derogatory words are used to describe us. But we can, and we must change the negative perception by doing things the right way. At this point in time, the matter of security must be rightly addressed without sweeping any item under the carpet. It is by far more important than getting elected or re-elected in 2019.

Since the federal government controls the security agencies, we Nigerians must insist that this government furnish us with credible answers to these and related questions: who and where are the criminals? Where are the people who kill Nigerians? Why have they not appeared in court? What is the Federal Government and its security agencies waiting for?

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