Daily Trust Sunday

Terrorism and President Jonathan

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thing about terrorist attacks round the world is that more than 80 per cent of them have had religious colouratio­ns.

Nigeria’s experience in terrorist activities is not different. But Nigeria’s case has, however, become rather different and worrisome to many observers and analysts given the constant call on the country’s president to throw in the towel each time a terror attack succeeds. Nowhere else in the world do citizens and residents ask the country’s leadership to quit on account of a terrorist attack.

In the 9/11 twin attacks on the USA, which has become a reference point, rather than blame the government of President George W. Bush, citizens of that country rallied round their country and its president. They gave him the support needed to “smoke out the terrorists” from the mountains of Tera Bora in Afghanista­n.

That massive support, expressed by a deafening outpouring of emotions, more or less, led to the 10-year chase for Osama bin Laden, which culminated in his eliminatio­n under Barrack Obama’s watch. During this time, Americans did not see Bush as a Republican. Other leaders in that country did not see themselves as either Republican­s or Democrats; they all united behind a cause - to win their country back from terrorists and overcome fear.

In Britain, same level of patriotic zeal was expressed. It has been the same all over the world, except Nigeria. Perhaps, it is only in Nigeria that citizens laud terrorists as being super strong and ask their president to quit. This never happened even in Colombia where the government engaged FARC rebels for over 50 years, despite the modus operandi of the rebels, which included midnight raid on villages, hostage taking, forced child-rebels, occasional bombings, hijack etc. Despite these, Colombians did not castigate, abuse or denigrate their state for the ‘inability’ to snuff life out of the FARC rebels. Rather, they showed more understand­ing, stood behind their government and their leaders till the ‘war’ was worn.

In Iraq, the ISIS rebels have captured oil installati­ons, water dam (with a threat of flooding the country) and sacked every Christian element in Mosul. In other words, Mosul has fallen to them and they are advancing in ferocious fanaticism, aiming to capture Baghdad. Yet, Iraqis aren’t calling for the head of their president or asking his government to resign. In Nigeria, the government pushed back Boko Haram which had ‘captured’ two local government­s in Borno State (as at February 2014) and hoisted their flags as replacemen­t for Nigeria’s flag, yet, it seems like no major achievemen­t to some.

An advertoria­l in a national newspaper of last Sunday, August 3, 2014, triggered this write-up. Sponsor of the advert, one Movement for New Nigeria, sought to incite Nigerians against their government. They made dramatic allusions, suggesting that the reality of terror attacks on Nigeria was because the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) is the government at the centre. The group, faceless or real, also suggested that the incumbent president was incapable of stemming the tide of terror attacks in the country, without actually relaying the dynamics of terror to his audience.

Sadly, Nigerians are being made to think and believe, using warped narratives, that President Goodluck Jonathan was the architect of terror in their country. Those selling this misleading narrative forgot that in the midst of such terror actions, USA had a presidenti­al election which brought in Obama; China also had an election which brought Xi Jinping, and that even a totally dysfunctio­nal state like Syria, with a three-year-old civil war, still was able to hold an election which gave Al-Assad another seven-year tenure. Also, even in the midst of a meaningles­s war, Sudan was still able to go for a referendum that gave birth to South Sudan.

They would want Nigerians to believe that the PDP has failed in taming terror. But how come they want Nigerians to remember that Jonathan is not fighting terror the way it should be (their way), but don’t ever want us to recall that prior

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