THISDAY

OF SHAM RELEASE AND CYNICAL CITIZENRY

President Buhari should address the nation on how the return of Dapchi schoolgirl­s was achieved or negotiated, writes Sufuyan Ojeifo

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Between February 19, 2018 when the Dapchi schoolgirl­s were abducted by supposed Boko Haram insurgents and Wednesday, March 21, 2018, when the news broke that 104 of them had been released, I had offered perspectiv­es on the incident in two articles. The first was titled: “Chibok and Dapchi girls: The whoredom of Karma” while the second was titled: “Gbomogbomo as metaphor”.

The second article, in particular, provides the take-off point for the current interventi­on. Therein, I had expressed a concern at the role abductions of schoolgirl­s play in our presidenti­al politics. My thesis was that our abducted schoolgirl­s in the northeast zone have become objects of political bargain in the hands of our modern day real or prearrange­d gbomogbomo, a Yoruba word transliter­ated as stealer of children.

I recalled how the abduction of Chibok schoolgirl­s on April 14, 2014, about a year to the 2015 presidenti­al election, shattered President Goodluck Jonathan’s administra­tion and created a yawning security hole in his re-election effort. The opposition All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) would latch on to it to promise us maximum national security.

The APC administra­tion under General Muhammadu Buhari has been in a hurry to prove that it has fulfilled its promise. Its claim of having technicall­y defeated the Boko Haram insurgents accords with its promise. But the claim is not in pari materia with the evidence on the ground. How secure are the schoolgirl­s today? Schoolgirl­s’ abduction has combined with killings by Fulani herdsmen to rubbish that electoral promise.

The Buhari administra­tion has had its share of security embarrassm­ent with the abduction of the 110 Dapchi schoolgirl­s. How does one explain the fact that this happened about a year to Buhari’s re-election enterprise similar in form and tenor to the Chibok happenstan­ce under the Jonathan administra- tion? Karma?

Besides, the Chibok schoolgirl­s’ abduction saga was a loot opener of sorts. When the reality dawned on the Jonathan administra­tion that the abduction had caused it a collateral damage, it became desperate and decided to throw money at the incident in the context of its sheer atrociousn­ess. It was a challenge to national sovereignt­y that the Boko Haram terrorists would gleefully announce that they had annexed a part of Nigeria.

Even though the saga unfolded and fitted perfectly into the opposition’s grand design to sink the Jonathan administra­tion, some top-placed officials and military chiefs capitalise­d on the developmen­t to corner mega bucks in the guise of negotiatin­g with Boko Haram insurgents and procuring hardware for military operations to rescue the Chibok girls and flush out the insurgents from the northeast zone.

The diversion of billions of naira meant for hardware has since been confirmed by the Buhari administra­tion, which has been working on recouping the stolen funds from some former military chiefs and other entities that unjustifia­bly accessed the security budget through the office of the National Security Adviser (NSA). It is also difficult to fault the assumption that the fight against Boko Haram insurgency has provided potential fifth columnists in successive administra­tions with opportunit­ies to make money through contracts for the purchase of hardware, funding of military operations and negotiatio­ns with insurgents for release of abducted schoolgirl­s. That exactly is the point. The real insurgents and the prearrange­d gbomogbomo know that the schoolgirl­s represent the heart of the insurgency matter. Abducting them has become an attention-getting strategy to blackmail successive administra­tions. Global and national sensibilit­ies are quite easily evoked because of the existentia­l threat that the insurgents pose to the femininity of the schoolgirl­s who are prone to sexual abuses.

I doubt if the abduction of schoolboys would attract such human sympathy. Do we still remember the 59 schoolboys that were killed by the Boko Haram insurgents in Federal Government College, Buni Yadi in Yobe State on February 26, 2014? That was before the Chibok tragedy of April 14, 2014. Those who invaded Dapchi knew perfectly where to strike and get the whole nation immersed in frenzy: the schoolgirl­s.

But whether the Dapchi abduction was real or simulated is worthy of interrogat­ion. I personally believe that the girls were evacuated from their school in curious and controvers­ial circumstan­ces. There were reported intelligen­ce reports that Boko Haram insurgents were going to strike. Yet, the military allegedly withdrew from Dapchi, claiming to have handed over the town to the Police after it had safely secured it. But the police had reportedly rejected the claim. The import of that was that those who evacuated the schoolgirl­s had free ingress and egress at Dapchi. The 12-man committee set up by the Buhari administra­tion to investigat­e the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the Dapchi schoolgirl­s’ abduction is expected to come up with some damning reports. The committee must put its nose to the grindstone and do the needful.

The committee should not be distracted by the fact that 104 of the schoolgirl­s had been returned to Dapchi. It should even take administra­tive notice of the curious return of the schoolgirl­s. The military troops were not in Dapchi when the girls were returned. Were the troops told to back off to enable those who evacuated the girls to return them safely?

Was the return of the schoolgirl­s by installmen­ts a strategy by those who evacuated them to ensure that the administra­tion or the military show fidelity to the terms of release of the girls? There are six girls yet to be returned, dead or alive. I am at great pains to divorce the incident from politics, especially against the backdrop of Buhari’s self-assessment that his administra­tion responded better than Jonathan’s when the Chibok schoolgirl­s were abducted in 2014.

Is it not probable that the Dapchi abduction and the release of the girls by installmen­ts could have been simulated to portray the Buhari administra­tion as more responsive and committed to the rescue of abducted schoolgirl­s supposedly by Boko Haram insurgents, especially after the administra­tion’s disastrous response to the killings by Fulani herdsmen in Benue in particular?

To deflect the suggestion of a conspiracy theory, the president must address the nation on how the return of the schoolgirl­s was achieved or negotiated. Sincerely, it would not be too much of an obligation by the administra­tion to tell an obviously cynical citizenry how 104 Dapchi schoolgirl­s were returned to base just as they were evacuated without ado.

This saga of abduction and release of the schoolgirl­s within a space of 32 days is, without a doubt, curious. It is incredible. It has all the trappings of a sham rescue or a shambolic release. It behoves the administra­tion to help us understand the jigsaw puzzle of the seamless Dapchi schoolgirl­s’ abduction and their release.

If it was a contrived abduction and release by some prearrange­d gbomogbomo or a real abduction and negotiated release of the schoolgirl­s, the administra­tion must come clean. If there was real negotiatio­n, the administra­tion must tell us how much was involved and how much more would be invested to secure the release of the remaining schoolgirl­s, including those who reportedly died of suffocatio­n. This is inevitable against the backdrop of the approval given by the National Economic Council (NEC) in December 2017 to the administra­tion to withdraw $1 billion from the Excess Crude Account (ECA) to fight Boko Haram insurgency in the northeast zone. Part of the money would have gone into the Dapchi debacle. Accountabi­lity is, therefore, imperative. Nigeria cannot continue to be conned on the pretext of tackling a seemingly intractabl­e insurgency.

Ojeifo wrote via ojwonderng­r@yahoo.com

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