By Abu Duniya
The Centre for Africa Liberation and Socio-Economic
Rights (CALSER) has challenged elders, leaders and political stakeholders in
Borno State to adopt new approach and strategy to defeat terrorists’ ideology.
In an emotion laden speech delivered at the Unity Fountain on Friday, the
Centre says it will take collaboration of the elders, politicians and other
stakeholders in condemning the antics of Boko Haram/ISWAP ideology for peace to
return to the north east.
CALSER’s convener, Princess Ajibola, in an open letter to Northeast elders,
stakeholders and politicians, called on these leaders to help build the region
and defeat terrorists’ ideology.
According to Convener, Princess Ajibola, the northeast must realise that “we
are our own enemies” and the “time has come for us to get out of this shell
that has tied our hands and tongues”.
CALSER, therefore, called on elders, political leaders and other stakeholders
to join hands with the government and the armed forces to extend the maximum
level of support needed to succeed in the fight against insurgency and for
Nigeria to defeat the Boko Haram/ISWAP ideology.
The Centre reckoned that this can only be achieved if a more pragmatic approach
towards defeating terrorist ideology is adopted.
Read full letter below:
Our respectable elders, esteemed stakeholders and political leaders in
North-east Nigeria, this is an appeal for us to stand up and take our destiny
in our hands. The time has come for us to sit and reason together concerning
what has been happening in our country, particularly the North-east region.
We cannot afford to pretend that all is still well when our
well-being as a people has been violated and the future for us and our children
threatened. The overall essence of our humanity is being threatened by evil,
wickedness and foreign conspiracies against our country.
We can no longer pretend that all is well with us, when we are being attacked
on a daily basis by evil minded men, when our sources of livelihood are
being destroyed, the social order we once enjoyed is being eroded, our people
are being killed and the very foundation of our existence shattered. Life
losing its true meaning and our core values being overtaken by a new
posture of malice, envy and jealousy.
In the past 10 years and more, our situation has become one of the most
pathetic and unfortunate conditions any group of humans have been subjected to
live with on the globe. We have been through the worst forms of human
experiences, forced on a daily basis to pass through the most devastating
circumstances known to man. This includes suffering by innocent children who
have committed no crime against us but simply being born Nigerians at this
point in time.
We have experienced and are experiencing bombs, land mines and other forms of
devices that do havoc to both our physical forms and psyche that the sound of
any of these no longer mean anything to us. We have seen lives cut short in the
most brutal manner, limbs chopped off and other horrors that are better not
mentioned.
We have seen innocent people butchered that the red colour of blood does not
evoke blood-curdling emotions any more. We have seen children orphaned in
seconds and women widowed in their thousands in the twinkle of an eye
that such sights no longer evoke sombreness as it used to.
We can say without fear of contradiction that our situation is worse that than
those of nations at war.
Those who under the throes
of war are enabled to idèntify the casus belli and thereby work towards a plan
of action to bring an end to the crisis and make for reconciliation to avoid
treading similar paths in future.
But in our case, we are daily confronted with despair and despondency owing to
the fact that while war has been declared on us, we cannot say what the
reasons are for the belligerence neither can we descry its duration.
The fact is that we are not even sure who the enemy is as the more we try to
point accusing fingers the more the fingers keep curving towards us. We are
told that the terrorists want to conquer and bring the nation down, but who are
the insurgents if not our blood brothers, uncles,.sons and other relations.
They are people known to us as there is none of us who can claim not to know at
least one or two of these persons causing the damages to us
We looked the other way because we thought they were aggrieved and that perhaps
their anger would last only for a little while.
We were wrong as there was no anger in the first place and the evil that is
driving them seems to have no end.
We thought that if we stop the onslaught on them and talked to them in a tongue
they understand, that they would drop their guns and come home. But our pleas
on their behalf seems to further aggravate the situation.
Our silence has crept in on us and we have now realised that we are our own
enemies. Our children are being recruited and trained to turn their guns and
bombs on us and we remain silent.
Our daughters and sisters are forcefully taken captives, defiled and humiliated
and we look in bewilderment, our lands are being desecrated with blood and we
say nothing, our people are being killed and we look the other way.
The time has come for us to get out of this shell that has tied our hands and
tongues, the time has come for us to take action and speak out against these
heinous crimes being committed against our people.
The North east used to be the home of peace and example of perfect social and
economic order that people from other parts of the country and indeed West
Africa send their children to come and acquire Islamic education on our shores.
From Bauchi to Gombe to Borno to Yobe, Adamawa and Taraba are vast fertile
lands for agriculture, mining and tourism that others not so privileged
come to share in our God-given assets.
It is not a coincidence that some of the most beautiful landscapes in the
country with captivating allure are found in this region.
For example the Yankari Game Reserve, the Lake Alau, the Gwoza hills and the
Mambilla Plateau are all here.
The strategic importance of the zone to the rest of the country are captured in
the numerous dams and river basins we have across the zone.
But all these cannot on their own yield the economic potential to the country
and humanity unless we the people put efforts to harness them.
And these cannot be harnessed in an atmosphere of bringandage, brouhaha, chaos,
cataclysmic social liquidation and war.
By the time we realise the effect of these years wasted in chaos and social
interruptions, it may be too late.
We therefore appeal to our elders, political leaders and other stakeholders to
join hands with the government and the armed forces of the Federal Republic of
Nigeria to extend to them the maximum level of support needed to succeed in the
fight against insurgency and for Nigeria to defeat the Boko Haram/ISWAP
ideology.
This we can achieve by evolving a more pragmatic approach towards
defeating the Boko Haram/ISWAP ideology that is targeted at breaking
Nigeria into pieces.
Cooperating with the Federal Government will send negative signal to the
terrorists that it is not business as usual and will put them out of business.
Our unequivocal condemnation of the terrorists and their evil habits will send
a signal to them that we are now united and want to see the final end of
terrorism.
Lasting peace will come if only the elders and stakeholders are passionately
involved and work hand in hand with the Federal Government to see that
the wounds begin to heal.
Perhaps the insurgents have mistaken our lukewarmness to mean we either condone
what they are doing or that we are too scared to talk to them. No one
should be too precious to live when the lives of our children and women
are not guaranteed.
We must condemn with every ounce these barbaric and dastardly acts and talk to
the insurgents to desist from the path they have chosen that normalcy should
return to the North east as we all would be the better for it if the force of
evil is overthrown.
The time for us to speak against the evil is NOW and not tomorrow. We must
defeat the Boko Haram/ISWAP ideology before it breaks us into pieces.