A kingdom can endure with unbelief, but it cannot endure with injustice.
Uthman Dan Fodio
Three
weeks ago, Boko Haram, the ultraviolent Islamic militant group rose
like a phoenix from hell from the ashes of its defeat last year by the
Nigerian military. In Maiduguri, Borno State, they carried out
motorcycle-borne ride-by shootings targeted at police officers and other
law enforcement agents. In Bauchi, they stormed a federal prison and
set free hundreds of their members as well as other inmates and
threatened reprisals against those they accused of persecuting their
members. Obviously, the military did not defeat Boko Haram last year
when a five-day long clash ended with the extrajudicial execution in
police custody of Mohammed Yusuf, the group’s leader. Although scores of
the militants were killed or rounded up, several also escaped, simply
melting into surrounding environs. According
to the State Security Service, Boko Haram has 540,000 members. A group
with that numerical strength cannot be wiped out by the strategy of
decapitation traditionally used by states to cripple dissident groups.
Decapitation as a strategy is simply targeting dissident leaders for
elimination as a means of exterminating their rebellion from the very
top. The resurgence of Boko Haram makes clear that the military
operation against it was only moderately successful.
The
emergence of Boko Haram signifies the maturation of long festering
extremist impulses that run deep in the social reality of Northern
Nigeria. But the group itself is an effect and not a cause; it is a
symptom of decades of failed government and elite delinquency finally
ripening into social chaos. Think of Boko Haram and other extremist
groups of its kind as bacterial cultures. We must understand the Petri
dish in which they have been cultivated. In order to appreciate the
peculiar resilience of such groups, we must grasp the socio-political
and economic conditions of the north. Northern Nigeria is a seething
mass of illiteracy, misery, poverty and beggary. While Nigeria generally
scores very poorly on every index of human development, Northern
Nigeria sinks below the abysmal national average to the extent that a
child born in the northwest or in the northeast is likely to have a
lower quality of life than a compatriot born in the southwest or
southeast.
The
news headlines in recent months portray only a part of the north’s
mosaic of human suffering. Since the beginning of the year, lead
poisoning has steadily decimated children in villages in Zamfara State,
where they have been forced by poverty to engage in illegal mining.
Cholera, a water-borne plague eradicated by the early 20th
century has reached epidemic proportions in the north where it has
killed hundreds. The recent outbreak has been called the worst in twenty
years and according to the Federal Ministry of Health now poses a
threat to the rest of the country. Cholera is rife in the north because
of the lack of potable water and flooding. In addition, the southward
surge of the Sahara is claiming many natural water bodies forcing rural
folk to resort increasingly to contaminated water sources.
In
2006, Borno State Governor Ali Modu Sheriff told broadcasters that he
was not bothered by criticisms of his administration in the print media
because 95 percent of the people in the state cannot read and write. In
any case, he added, less than 2 percent of Borno residents have access
to newspapers. The governor’s press people later clarified that what he
had meant to say was that radio and television were the dominant media
in the state. To discerning ears impervious to spin-doctoring, it
sounded as if Governor Sheriff had been glorying in the illiteracy level
of his people and boasting of its utility as a political weapon. Mahmud
Shinkafi, the current governor of Zamfara achieved infamy in 2002 when
as Deputy Governor he pronounced a fatwa urging Muslims to kill Isioma
Daniel, a Thisday reporter,
for alleged blasphemy. Despite the acute humanitarian crisis of the
north, its leading politicians have been preoccupied in recent months
with how to clinch presidential power in 2011 and how to negotiate
favourable niches in a post-2011 political reality. Clearly the
priorities of the so-called northern political elites are not in
consonance with the realities of their people.
These
facts are necessary to provide an insight into the prevailing political
psychology in the north. Boko Haram is the consequence incarnate of
misrule by delinquent political elites. It is a creature of state
failure demonstrating the decline of our institutions in all its
unvarnished ugliness. Despite the fact that the sect sent a widely
publicized letter warning of its militant intentions, its attacks still
surprised law enforcement agencies. The diminished intelligence
capabilities of the government, the ease with which the militants struck
at the federal prison and the group’s boldness in attacking federal
agents since 2005 all indicate the waning strength of the Nigerian
state. Elsewhere in the federation a range of embryonic insurgencies
exist in the form of militant groups in the Niger Delta and kidnap gangs
in the south east, and they intimate us of the fact that the Nigerian
state no longer has the means to impose its will on this country; it no
longer has a monopoly over the coercive instruments that underwrite the
state’s rule and indemnify it against sedition or dissidence. Boko Haram
is the terrifying face of this reality in northern Nigeria. It is the
harbinger of incipient chaos.
Boko
Haram is an extremist group but it transcends the traditional extremist
victimization of Christians in pursuit of grander anarchic ambitions.
Its war is with the Nigerian state and western education which it
perceives as a vector of the corrupting influence of modernity. Its
ultimate objective is some version of an Islamic state, preferably of 7th century vintage. In this, it closely resembles Maitatsine,
the violent extremist cult that inaugurated the bloody era of religious
terrorism in the north in the early 1980s. But Boko Haram is itself
only a part of the picture. The social conditions that permit its
existence are rife across the country. Millions of unschooled and
unskilled able-bodied young men reside in our cities and towns and
provide a ready pool of malcontents for extremist recruitment. Even
among the educated unemployed, the crisis of unemployment in Nigeria
where 40 million youths are jobless makes them vulnerable to sectarian
preachments. Into this breach, groups like Boko Haram enter offering a
theological framework of social analysis: rampant poverty and
existential meaninglessness emanate from the Nigerian state and its
unislamic provenance; from the presence of western education and the
intrusion of modernity into an Islamic society. Boko Haram imparts to
its members a sense of purpose and mission as warriors for the cause of
God ordained to cleanse the society of moral impurities and establish an
alternate order.
In
a failed or failing state, religion is particularly prone to
perversion. The role of the state is to protect humanity from assault by
the elemental forces of nature through the institution of law and
order. Where the state is derelict, religion is often the likeliest
agency people turn to for interpreting the vagaries of their existence.
This is what has happened in Nigeria. The explosion of sectarian
violence in northern Nigeria coincided with four developments in the
eighties – the collapse of the Second Republic which signaled the
failure of politics and a popular loss of faith in politicians;
Babangida’s imposition of the Structural Adjustment Program (SAP) which
eliminated state subsidies, and through untrammeled trade liberalization
wiped out local enterprises (especially the major textile industries
and tanneries of the north) thereby eliminating jobs; the Babangida
regime’s unhelpful religious politicking as evinced by its surreptitious
dealings with the Organization of Islamic Countries (OIC) which gave
the impression that it was a pro-Muslim regime and inflamed sectarian
suspicions; and the collapse of the agrarian communities of Nigeria’s
northern neighbours, Niger and Chad due to massive plagues of drought
and desertification, spewing huge numbers of refugees into northern
Nigerian cities where they fell into the void of extremism. Niger and
Chad are essentially failed states and represent bleak prophecies of
what could eventually befall northern Nigeria.
Even
now, as desertification and drought devastate vast swathes of the
north, a convergence of ecological, economic and social adversities is
occurring. When rural areas lose ancestral farmland to the onslaught of
the Sahara desert, huge numbers of disinherited young men flood northern
towns and cities in search of jobs. In some places they become
commercial motorcycle riders known as Achaba
who now number about three million in the Kano metropolis; otherwise
they swell the ranks of the urban underclass and most wind up on the
margins of society from where they become easy recruits for politicians
looking to build private armies or for roaming bands of outlawed
extremists or bandits. Note that in the southeast where gully erosion
has devastated rural communities, young men dispossessed of any means of
livelihood make for the urban areas where many sadly enlist in the
underworld. It is permissible to argue a direct link between the
ecological degradation of rural areas and the uptick in urban crime and
terrorism that has gripped south eastern metropolises.
These
instances tell us that the umbrella of the Nigerian state is in tatters
and while a derelict political class continues its self-indulgence,
dispossessed Nigerians are embarking on the path of self-help by any
means at their disposal. Religion is one of those means. It is tempting
to argue that this pattern of perverse religiousity is something unique
to the north and attributable to its Islamic heritage. This is untrue.
Consider the neo-Pentecostal cults in Akwa Ibom that engage in torture
of suspected child witches. In these communities, pastors or exorcists
are engaged by poverty-stricken parents to seek out the witches in their
household. Children are tortured, found guilty of witchcraft and
banished from home from which point onwards they fall prey either to
early death or sexual slavery and maltreatment as victims of
child-trafficking. In a failed or failing state, religion assumes the
role of locating scapegoats to explain social conditions of misery. In
the north, Boko Haram blames the presence of western education and the
Nigerian state itself; other extremists blame it on the presence of
Christians or infidels, just as in some other parts it is blamed on the
presence of non-indigenes, infidels or strangers. In parts of Akwa Ibom,
defenceless children are the scapegoats for material conditions of
poverty.
The view that Islam is solely to blame for religious violence in the north is simplistic for another reason. The
south has a very substantial Muslim population (particularly in the
southwest and parts of Edo state) and records very little of the sort of
sectarian bloodletting that periodically grips the north. The
region’s acceptance of western education and, especially, Obafemi
Awolowo’s single-minded insistence on free education freed many
communities from the yoke of illiteracy, boosted the technical capacity
of the western region and created a vibrant middle class. Economic
security meant that religious affiliation could not be the primary
social identity in the region. Lagos State, for instance, has only ever
had one democratically elected Christian governor – Sir Michael Otedola,
who served in the short-lived Third Republic. Yet, this has never been
an issue in Lagos politics. Compare this with Kaduna State where
Governor Patrick Yakowa is the first Christian to occupy that position,
despite the considerable Christian demographic presence in the state.
His ascension to that office this year was attended with uneasy novelty,
tension and fears of sectarian violence from some Muslims who saw his
rise as a loss of power.
The
difference is that religion is at the centre of northern life. Matters
of faith are synonymous with political allegiances. The north,
historically hobbled by its cultural resistance to western education,
experienced the absence of technical capacity and a lack of readiness
for the demands of a modern economy, for which it had to compensate by
accommodating southerners and expatriates. According to B.J. Dudley in
his seminal work, Instability and Political Order,
deep-seated resentment of the educated, technically-savvy southerners
who formed the urban merchant middle class of the north was the source
of ethnic violence in the region between the 1940s and 1960s. He argued
that these explosions of inter-tribal animosity were also (indeed,
primarily) class conflicts pitting wealthy southerners against the
northern urban underclass. This thesis remains valid. Storefronts in
commercial districts are specifically targeted during bouts of rioting
by the armies of vagrants and juvenile delinquents that roam northern
cities and towns. This kind of “ethno-religious” violence stems from
cultural hysteria – the angst of communities who are unprepared for a
modern social economy, who have been raised to be deeply antagonistic of
modernity and who consider themselves assailed by outsiders as a
result. Young males are socialized to see themselves as victims and
then to react as aggressors. Their rage is inevitably directed at
presumed alien influences in their communities, often people of other
faiths and ethnicities. Supremacist ideologies rooted in inferiority
complexes gain increasing audience.
Without
the skills necessary to access opportunities in the current
socio-economic equation, the people are left with nothing but their
religion as their sole resource and are thus vulnerable to all the
monstrous mutations of faith that are liable to manifest in a climate of
ignorance, corruption and economic inequality. Such alienation feeds
the burgeoning subculture of violence embodied by street gangs like the Yan Daba in Kano and Sara Suka
in Bauchi. The political imperatives are clear. The north in
educational and socio-economic terms is a disaster area comparable to
the ecologically devastated Niger Delta. Both zones are theatres of
human and environmental carnage wrought by rapacious elites. Northern
politicians have singularly failed to invest in education and to fast
track infrastructural development in the region. Indeed, over the years,
northern elites have cultivated the impression that illiteracy and
ignorance are part of northern identity; that part of what it means to
be a northerner is to be illiterate, in order to facilitate their own
positions as political protectors of their victimized people. Even the
Koranic education system is dysfunctional and is mainly mass-producing
millions of almajiris – the street children that are fixtures in
virtually every northern town and city.
This is a travesty of the region’s history and heritage. Northern
Nigeria has a long-lived tradition of learning and literacy. Uthman Dan
Fodio’s jihad was not only aimed at purifying Islam but also at
replacing the rule of materialistic potentates with that of scholars. A comparable analog is Plato’s idealized government by philosopher-kings. But Northern-dominated anti-intellectual military regimes from the mid-eighties onward reduced the region to a crypt of learning. Anti-intellectualism
is now promoted as being synonymous with Islam – a strange proposition
since the religion gave the world gifts of insight in the sciences,
astronomy, medicine and mathematics especially algebra. We still use
Arabic numerals as the mathematical medium for explaining the physical
universe. In the north, there persists a residual antagonism of the
so-called Yan Boko – western-educated northerners “who have forgotten their roots.” This obdurate
resistance to education and glorification of illiteracy remains along
with elite kleptomania, the region’s greatest obstacle to progress and
the leading vector of sectarian violence and poverty.
At the beginning of the 20th
century, the British colonialists and the Fulani aristocracy conspired
to block the spread of western education in the north. The British
wanted to avoid what had transpired in southern Nigeria where the ready
acceptance of education had created a generation of anti-colonial
nationalist agitators. They also wanted to avoid the emergence of
educated Islamists of the sort that were then challenging their rule in
Egypt. The British understood that western education would upset the
conservative feudal social order over which their allies, the emirs
ruled and would ultimately endanger colonialism itself. The Fulani
aristocracy objected to western education because they feared that its
Christian missionary purveyors would gain inroads into their domains.
Herein
lies the source of the historic schism between northern and southern
Nigeria. It was not political in the beginning but educational,
technical and thus socio-economic. The northern elites of the
independence era led by Ahmadu Bello necessarily saw their roles as
slowly opening their society to modernity while preserving it from
domination by the southerners who were better prepared for the rigours
of a modern economy. Today, it is fair to say that the general antipathy
to western education in the north has been sustained by political
elites who understand that psychological subservience is best
perpetuated in a climate of ignorance and fear. By using the bogey of
southern domination and manipulating religious and cultural symbols,
northern politicians have been able to maintain their access to power.
Decades ago, the leftist academic Bala Usman extensively critiqued what
he accurately identified as the elite manipulation of religion for
economic and political advantage.
Boko Haram and other extremist groups of its ilk have also emerged in the context of a yawning political vacuum in the north. Forty
years ago, the poor of the north at least had champions like the great
Mallam Aminu Kano and his Northern Elements Progressive Union (NEPU) and later the Peoples Redemption Party (PRP). Mallam Kano, a scion of the ruling class was an ardent advocate of the talakawa
and made it his life’s cause to terminate the conservative power
structures that he deemed responsible for their poverty. He championed
education, women’s rights and the social emancipation of a people bent
double under the yoke of feudal oppression. He used Islam as a
liberating ideology against the preachments of those who used Islam as
an ideology of subjection of the masses and women. In his excellent study, Ethnic Politics in Nigeria,
Okwudiba Nnoli details how the British colonialists colluded with their
local confederates in the 1950s to deny NEPU its electoral victory
using thuggery, chicanery and intimidation.
In the years since the early eighties when Mallam Kano died, the fortunes of northern progressives have waned. There has been no other northern (or for that matter, Nigerian) politician of comparable iconic status and moral authority. The machinations of conservative opponents and military dictators ensured that the northern progressive movement
was reduced to its entrails. No politician and certainly none of his
prominent disciples have risen to claim Aminu Kano’s mantle. In
the absence of a progressive opposition to the conservative ruling
elite, a dangerous vacuum has grown in northern politics. The talakawa
may have lost their political champions but this is not to say that
they are completely voiceless. It is this vacuum created by the
neutralization of progressive forces that extremist cults are now seeking to fill. It is their advocacy of the cause of the poor and their opposition to social injustice that lends these groups their appeal. Boko Haram and allied groups represent a potent if erroneous critique of the delinquent state and its dysfunctional leadership culture.
Boko Haram’s actions cast some light on our institutional failings.
Their assault on the federal prison in Bauchi may even be seen as an
escalated protest against a travesty of justice. 70 percent of Nigeria’s
prison population is awaiting trial. The justice system is
over-burdened, beset by corruption, manpower shortages and other
plagues. Keeping Nigerians in detention without trial indefinitely does
not serve the cause of justice. From their point of view, Boko Haram
simply liberated their brethren from illegal captivity by state
agencies. If suspected terrorists cannot be charged to court and
successfully convicted, then it is the fault of the state.
In
a sense, the Boko Haram saga is also about chickens coming home to
roost. For years, northern politicians paid lip-service to
anti-Christian violence wrought by homicidal zealots. It was as though
some secret diabolical transaction stipulated that Christian lives be
used to placate the violent extremists to stop them from turning their
attentions to their leaders. Emergent groups like Boko Haram, Kalo Kato
among others are sectarian zealots like their forebears but have now
arrogated to themselves the right to determine who or what is “Islamic.”
To that extent, the double-edged sword of extremism is now aimed
precipitously at the jugular of the northern ruling classes. It remains
to be seen if northern politicians understand the catastrophic
potentials of the Frankenstein monster that they have created; whether
they can act to stamp out the homicidal pathologies festering along the
margins of their society.
A
few things can be done to arrest the slide into anarchy. The federal
government should establish special tribunals mandated to deal
expeditiously with cases of sectarian violence and terrorism. The
capabilities of security agencies in terms of intelligence gathering and
early warning systems should be enhanced. The operational conditions
and capacities of the police mobile units, the army and other
paramilitary agencies should be enhanced with respect to addressing
urban terrorism and guerilla warfare. From all indications, our security
forces are not yet attuned to the operational nuances of suburban
counter-insurgency and conventional military approaches result in great
collateral loss of life and property. Our northern borders with Chad,
Niger and Cameroon are notoriously porous and have to be secured against
the influx of weapons and would-be extremists and fanatics from these
countries.
However,
the greatest task lies in the domain of politics and public policy. The
fact is that vast areas of the north are conducive to crime and
insurgency. So too are the scores of decaying urban centres across
Nigeria left desolate after the collapse of social services and public
utilities in the late eighties and early nineties. There needs to be
serious commitment at the highest levels of government to address the
entropic conditions incubating groups like Boko Haram. It might require
some kind of federal intervention especially in the areas of education
and healthcare and greater pressure on northern elites to develop the
region. Without this, Nigeria could find itself battling with an
insurgency in the north in addition to its manifold challenges. And
unlike Niger Delta militants who are at least open to negotiating with
the state, the absolutist extremist groups in the north want nothing
except the very destruction of the state itself.
Superior
bullets, bombs and spies alone will not defeat extremism. Terrorism as a
form of protest beckons to a generation of youths who see that they are
destined to live and die in poverty and deprivation. Their present is
bleak and their future is uncertain. Thus, they take refuge in a
manufactured past, a mythical 7th century Islamic Utopia into
which they seek to forcibly induct the rest of the society. For these
alienated legions, life is a more frightening prospect than death so
presumed martyrdom has an allure because it offers a post-mortem status
that exceeds anything that Nigeria can currently offer them. Such cults
threaten national security because they virulently oppose the
pluralism, tolerance and civic mutuality generated by the very existence
of the Nigerian nation. Their ideologies are by nature exclusionary
accommodating only one perspective. Our national ideal, even if observed
mostly in the breach for much of our history, is inclusion. Furthermore
civic solidarity is undermined when a growing number of Nigerians
aspire to relocate to the 7th century while the rest strive to master the 21st century. It is worse when these mutually exclusive aspirations occur along geographical lines.
Ultimately,
we must redefine the notion of Nigerian citizenship in such a way that
it provides a framework of civic purpose and welfare for every citizen.
Being a Nigerian must offer a measure of existential meaning for
Nigerians otherwise disaffected millions will seek definition in narrow,
exclusive and polarizing sectarian identity constructs. The only cure
for extremism is an umbrella of psychological, social and economic
security spread over the nation by a socially responsible state, one
that sees its role as guaranteeing the common good. Constructing such a
state is the most urgent task of leadership today.
No comments:
Post a Comment