The Guardian (Nigeria)

The Gumi Gambit

- Bymuftau Gbadegesin Gbadegesin wrote via muftaugbad­egesin@ gmail. com

FOryears, the hideouts of bandits in Nigeria was a mystery. DSS, and other top intelligen­ce services seem helpless in handling the rigors of tracing and tracking the criminals. The services failed to give helpful tips and useful informatio­n on ways to rid the atrocities of those bloodthirs­ty monsters. Freely and with reckless abandon, the outlaws committed cruelty raking millions while killing hundreds of innocent souls. Those in authority also watched carelessly as citizens fell prey. Dressed in camouflage while riding on bikes, these heartless fellows sack villages, liter towns with blood, dump bodies on ground and brought tears and sorrows along with drums.

More than the dreaded Boko Haram who now play second fiddle both in attention and media reports; these bandits operate with confidence, attack with dexterity and hold law abiding citizens to ransom. Media coverage of their menace, whenever it trickles in shattered hearts. And the essence of their guerilla and insurrecti­on against Nigeria was as obscure as their identities. Entered Sheikh Abubakar Gumi. Those who have been held captives by the bandits in the North including two of my friends tell of their horrific dens. Because the captors are kidnappers and murderers, victims are subjected to trauma, one that may last a lifetime. But the triumphant entry of Sheikh Abubakar Gumi into the bandits banana republic, is changing narration as the popular preacher now brand those lawless gangs freedom fighters who deserved respect and pecks of liberation.

While Boko Haram had excellent public relations, bandits, presumably a group of illiterate and itinerants seems to take public romance with levity. Good products sell itself. And truthfully, even as of today, the group has neither a spokespers­on nor a known leader. Boko Haram for instance is led by that notorious Abubakar Shekau. He appears in their videos. Read their terse statements and threaten the country. For several times, he was reported to have been killed, only to resurface and sting the Government again. A cat with nine lives.

Sheikh Gumi’s ( mis) adventure into that forest of fear is already shaping story around the scourge. His audacity to compare those devil incarnate with freedom fighters is already causing ripple effect on the polity. How the preacher got himself into that place, sits endearingl­y well and have a long chat with them continue to beat the imaginatio­n of well- meaning Nigerians. The shock of that meeting is still rippling through the veins of many compatriot­s. But for those who know the web of criminalit­ies in the country especially in a deeply conservati­ve North, that visit is nothing short of surprise. Gumi only take a gamble intended to galvanize his popularity, inspire the bandits and wreck Nigeria completely.

That visit and subsequent statements such as one on the kidnapped Kagara boys by Sheikh Abubakar Gumi is setting a bad precedence for Nigeria — a deeply divided and tension soaked country, battling scores of existentia­l threats. At a time the country battles and juggles for unity, peace and stability, that romance is both dangerous and deadly. And only those in authority can wade in and put an end to it. As for the rest of the country, that mediative and negotiatin­g roles being adroitly played by that preacher is nothing short of a slap on their faces and a punch in their stomachs. And to victims and captives, who await judgement, the continuous interventi­on of that sheikh on behalf of the criminals is a knock on their heads. The gambit cannot last.

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