By Femi Oluwasanmi
Since the return to democratization in 1999, the call for good governance has been a reverberating chorus in Nigeria. Desperation to make this happen at a desired speed led to the acceptance of the mantra of change and next level with the expectations to accelerate to the crescendo, where hope would be fully renewed. Unfortunately, this seems to be the opposite with the expansion in the “colony of poverty” and killing fields that have turned the country to a laughing stock at the comity of nations.
On December 24, 2023, more than 195 people were killed following the invasion of 25 communities in Barkin Ladi, Bokkos and Mangu communities by gunmen on Christmas eve in Plateau State in a manner that turned the atmosphere of joy to sorrow and raised questions on the safety of lives and properties under the watch of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.
While the sympathisers continue to troop to the scene to sympathize with the people and assure them of a better tomorrow with a promise that the government will bring the perpetrators to book, a letter surfaced purported to be from the gunmen threatening to revisit the areas on the 29th and rain more havoc on the communities. Though they failed to meet their target on the said date but their reinforcement led to the death of three young men looking for their missing relatives in the area on the 30th.
Probably, the numbers of the casualties would have been more than three if the people in the communities had ignored the warning of the terrorists by relying on the government that claimed to be on top of the situation. However, the incidence of people disregarding the voice of the government at the command of the terrorists, especially in conflict-prone areas is not new.
In May, every married man in Keta Village in Zamfara State was reported placed a levy of N5,000 by bandits for them to enjoy freedom of movement, freedom of farming activities and others. The same is the experience of communities that have sealed protection accords with terrorists in order to ensure that they live and work in peace.
Similarly, on December 26, the governor of Plateau State, Mr. Celeb Mutfwang, stated that no fewer than 64 communities have been displaced and their lands taken over by terrorists. In fact, some of the schools in the areas have been occupied for the last three to five years with the children in those schools relocated, and primary healthcare centres abandoned because of the presence of terrorists.
Meanwhile, Chapter 4 of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, as amended, states the fundamental human rights to include right to life; dignity of human person; personal liberty; fair hearing; private and family life; freedom of thought; conscience and religion; freedom of expression and of the press; peaceful assembly and freedom of association; freedom of movement; freedom from discrimination; and freedom to acquire and own immovable property anywhere in Nigeria.
Specifically, Section 33 provides that no one shall be deprived intentionally of his life, save in the execution of the sentence of a court in respect of a criminal offence of which he has been found guilty. To ensure that these rights are properly protected, the monopoly of force was exclusively given to the state, represented by the government.
Unfortunately, the experience in Nigeria seems to suggest that the government has failed or is in reverse gear moving towards the bus stop of failure. This has degenerated to the level that even some of the people in the corridors of power have agreed that there are ungoverned spaces too difficult for the security agencies to penetrate and operate, thereby buttressing the claims of those alleging that the country has ceded part of its territories to terrorists as against the provisions in Section 2(1) of the Constitution, which stipulates that Nigeria is an indissoluble and indivisible state.
Although how the country slipped to this trying time might be obscured, it cannot be unconnected to the cumulative failure of the governments that have created a very wide gap between the “haves and the have-nots” and promoted politics of bitterness to the level where little manipulation and enticement can make people to fall prey of the warlords masquerading as messiahs.
Based on the last National Bureau Statistics (NBS) literacy report, most of the areas that are experiencing regular visitation of terrorists are areas that have featured or are leading on the list of states with high level of poverty and lowest literacy index. For example, Zamfara is among the six states with lowest literacy rates and 10 states ranked to have the highest poverty rates in Nigeria.
Though some of the challenges were inherited by the President, the inability to proffer solutions to them has shown that the messiah Nigerians are looking for is yet to come. Rather, what seems to exist is another task master that continue to persuade Nigerians to pay more sacrifices for national development, while those in the corridors of power continue to enlarge their grip on the country’s wealth.
For instance, while the fuel subsidy was removed to justify the need to pull Nigeria off the path of economic collapse, the National Assembly members were given new jeeps worth N160 million each while N10 billion was allocated for the proposed students loan and N20 billion allocated for the renovation of the residencies of the President, Vice-President, and vehicles for the First Lady’s office in the supplemtary budget passed in October.
The same seems to repeat itself in the 2024 appropriation bill passed by the National Assembly on 30th December, where N47 billion was allocated to the Senate, N74 billion for the House of Representatives, while a total of N50 billion was allocated for proposed students loan scheme.
That Nigeria is bleeding and needs urgent attention is not in doubt, that is why the President needs to move from promises to fulfilment by formulating people-oriented policies, putting in place measures that will minimize unintended consequences in policy implementation, show more political will in the quest to pull down the stronghold of terrorists and rebuild the broken bridges occasioned by the activities of these unscrupulous elements across the country so that the dwindling hope can be renewed.
•Oluwasanmi writes from
Atakunmosa, Osun State