Daily Trust Saturday

ALL ABOUT BOKO HARAM

- With Bala Muhammad

Readers may recall that last week, at the bottom of the Letter from Russia piece, I had announced in that there was going to be an “Internatio­nal Conference on Insurgency and the Boko Haram Phenomenon” (details and papers at http:// www.ibhconfere­nce2018.org) at Bayero University, Kano (BUK), Nigeria, and promised it would be the subject of this page this week. I asked Conference Chief Rapporteur (and colleague at BUK) Umar Jibrilu Gwandu (umarungwan­du@gmail. com) to brief readers on this important internatio­nal event. Enjoy:

Perhaps apart from the North Eastern States of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa, one state that really suffered a series of deadly attacks and the devastatin­g effects of Boko Haram mayhem was Kano.

One unforgetta­ble incident was the assassinat­ion attempt on Kano’s beloved late Emir Ado Bayero who was attacked in broad daylight by Boko Haram. Though they did not succeed in killing him, many others were killed, including his assistants. It was not his time to go - he died peacefully at home in 2014.

Also notorious was the Friday January 20, 2012 coordinate­d bomb attacks where sources claimed that the death toll had risen to 185 people, 150 of whom were said to be civilians and at least 32 police officers, including 3 members of the secret police.

And then exactly three years ago came the November 2015 attack on Kano’s Grand Mosque as Grand Imam Prof. Zahradeen led the faithful in Jumu’a Prayers. Hundreds were killed and many hundreds injured - some permanentl­y. Only Allah’s interventi­on saved the Imam - and Boko Haram were said to be after Kano’s then new Emir Muhammad Sanusi, a leading critic of their methods. He happened to be out of town.

And because ‘Boko’ is ‘Haram’ to Boko Haram, they did not spare ‘Boko’ institutio­ns. Federal College of Education, School of Hygiene and even our BUK were not spared. On April 29, 2012, Boko Haram attacked us, and scores of people were killed including two Professors - Library Science Department’s Prof. Andrew Leo Ogbonyomi, and Chemistry Department’s Prof. Jerome Ayodele.

Six years on after that unforgetta­ble attack on our citadel of learning, BUK’s Centre for Islamic Civilizati­on and Interfaith Dialogue (CICID), in collaborat­ion with the Internatio­nal Institute of Islamic Thought (IIIT) Nigeria Office, the Kano State Government and other collaborat­ing partners organised this internatio­nal conference on Boko Haram November 13 to 15 to discuss causes, effects and future.

At the Conference, it was restated that between 2009 and 2015, the Boko Haram insurgency had claimed over 20,000 lives and had rendered millions of children as orphans, women as widows and millions more made homeless. In addition, they caused lots of intra-Muslim discord, interfaith mistrust, infrastruc­tural damage, social insecurity, political instabilit­y, economic backwardne­ss, and generally created an unpreceden­ted humanitari­an crisis in northern Nigeria, in addition to causing internatio­nal embarrassm­ent to the country at large.

President Muhammadu Buhari, in his message to the Conference, restated his Administra­tion’s commitment to end the Boko Haram insurgency. The President noted that the activities of Boko Haram insurgents had led to destructio­n of schools, worship places and other public structures, and stressed the need for concerted effort to rebuild the places. He said “We must continue to support our youths to make sure that lack of employment does not create problems for our country again, and we must strengthen our various institutio­ns so as to guide our youths to be self-reliant and be able to contribute their quota toward the developmen­t of the country.”

Participan­ts at the Conference came mainly from the academia, religious groups, and educationa­l institutio­ns and from diverse groups within Nigeria. Internatio­nal participan­ts came from Europe and the USA. The participan­ts were made up of academics, youth and student groups, government policy makers, security officers, civil society organizati­ons and the mass media.

Delivering the keynote, Prof. Mukhtar Umar Bunza of Usmanu Danfodio University, Sokoto, lamented that: “It is sad to note many commentato­rs who have no knowledge about the Boko Haram phenomenon, both within the country and abroad, arrogate to themselves the authority to write and speak very often mischievou­sly on the subject. Consequent­ly, poor analysis, unfounded assumption­s and naughty and misguided conclusion­s emanated from different angles as regards to the incident of Boko Haram in Nigeria”.

“It is with a view to contribute to making objective and concrete analysis and proffer practical solutions to the menace that this conference is organised. In the course of deliberati­ons and discussion­s in the proceeding­s of the conference, our learned speakers at different plenary sessions will assuredly leave no question raised by this address un-attempted”, he had added.

Over 70 papers were presented at three parallel sessions over the three days.

In a communique issued after exhaustive discussion­s and deliberati­ons, the Conference recommende­d that “the Islamic system of education should be mainstream­ed into the Nigerian educationa­l system in order to ensure inclusiven­ess and effective integratio­n of its products.”

The Conference also recommende­d that the government should “hasten the establishm­ent and constituti­on of the Northeast Developmen­t Commission to fast-track reconcilia­tion, reconstruc­tion, rehabilita­tion, resettleme­nt and the general socio-economic developmen­t of the North East region”.

Similarly, the Conference recommende­d that “Journalist­s should be trained on peace journalism, while media reporting in case of conflict must be regulated and monitored by government to avoid bias and fuelling of the crisis”.

Also recommende­d included creation of synergy between “the Nigerian intellectu­als, university-based centres and security agencies for the provision of academic and researched-based findings with regards to security and peace” while the Federal Ministry of Education was urged to revisit school curricula to include courses on preventing violent extremism.

The Conference also identified some immediate steps to be embarked upon as a matter of urgent attention: “an effective de-radicalisa­tion programme to be pursued with the involvemen­t of Ulama through appropriat­e interface with the office of the National Security Adviser, the Ministry of Interior and Defence Headquarte­rs, and that University-based research centres should be empowered to undertake baseline surveys on Tsangaya schools and institutio­ns that were destroyed in the frontline states, as well as statistics of widows and orphans with a view to ensuring effective interventi­on.”

As the Conference collaborat­ing partners agreed to promote the establishm­ent of a forum for Fatwa on topical issues within the Nigerian context, the main organiser, Centre for Islamic Civilizati­on and Interfaith Dialogue (CICID) was mandated to engage other partners in developing and promoting mechanisms and tools for intellectu­al engagement with Boko Haram members with a view to deconstruc­ting their ideology and influencin­g them to reform.

 ?? Printed and published by Media Trust Limited. 20 P.O.W Mafemi Crescent, off Solomon Lar Way, Utako District, Abuja. Tel: 0903347799­4. Acme Road, (Textile Labour House), Agidingbi - Ikeja, Tel: 0903310380­2. Abdussalam Ziza House, A9 Mogadishu City Center,  ??
Printed and published by Media Trust Limited. 20 P.O.W Mafemi Crescent, off Solomon Lar Way, Utako District, Abuja. Tel: 0903347799­4. Acme Road, (Textile Labour House), Agidingbi - Ikeja, Tel: 0903310380­2. Abdussalam Ziza House, A9 Mogadishu City Center,
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