The Guardian (Nigeria)

Alternativ­e rhetoric to ending the North East war

- Bob Majirioghe­ne Etemiku is publisher, WAD O NOR… cultural voice of Nigeria.

SIR: T wo issues arising from the modus operandi of Nigeria’s war in the North East include the following: one, in spite of being hy ped as a compact fighting force during fracases in Sierra Leone and Liberia, together with sterling contributi­ons at UN Peace Keeping missions around the world, Nigeria seems to have failed miserably to prosecute its own war. Two, from inception of the ‘ insurgency’ in the North East ( wrongfully so termed), Nigeria has spent billions of naira, with most of it being frittered away or pilfered allegedly by the Generals prosecutin­g the war in the North East. Is it that President Muhammadu Buhari, commander in chief of the armed forces is giving the right orders but that his generals are not carrying out his orders? Is it that the

Emperor is giving the wrong orders but that his generals are unwilling or unable to carry out those wrong orders?

A 2004 incident involving a terrorist attack in Russia, known today as the Beslan school massacre, involved the abduction of over a thousand people ( 777 were children according to Wikipedia) and it lasted three days. In spite of entreaties, the terrorists held onto the children and their teachers without food and water while the stalemate lasted. And therefore, Vladimir Putin gave the order for soldiers to storm that school, and take on the terrorists. The incident left 333 people and 186 of the children dead. The incidence establishe­d Putin as the undisputed Russian strongman, but it left a permanent scar on the conscience of Russians.

Recent news indicate that Governor El- Rufai of Kaduna State favours the Putin alternativ­e. He was recently quoted to have said that the surest way to bring the war in the North East to an end would be a total and sweeping bombardmen­t of the Sambisa Forest, famous as base for Nigeria’s antagonist­s.

I believe Nigeria can take specific readings or coefficien­ts – and thereafter send in the specialise­d jet fighters – the recently acquired Tucano Jets or drones – and thereafter Nigeria would likely experience true ‘ containmen­t’ or a ‘ degradatio­n’ of the activities of ‘ insurgents’. An outright bombardmen­t of Sambisa Forest as a militar y option against these ‘ insurgents’ may be cutting our nostrils to spite

our face.

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