Wednesday, 14 March 2018

Please Address Security Challenges, Mr. President



I m not a Buharist, whatever that means. If Buharism is a religion, I don’t believe in it. I am a Muslim. If it is a cult, I am not a member; I don’t join cults. If it is an association, I have not registered with it. I don’t even know its office. I simply like Buhari because I believe he is one of the least corrupt leaders Nigeria has produced. But I also believe that Buhari is only another human being who is not infallible. I have thus criticized him from time to time. In fact when, in those days of PDP, he was contesting and losing and people of questionable characters kept using his name to win elections, I almost travelled to Kaduna to advise him to quit politics.
Buhari is now the president of Nigeria and many nasty things have happened to his people under his watch. Fulani have been killed in large numbers in Taraba state. People live in constant fear for their lives and property in Zamfara state and my own part of Katsina state. And most recently the ‘Dapchi girls’ scandal has occurred. In all these cases, many people, including me are not satisfied with the way Mr. President has reacted. I agree with the person who used the adjective ‘timid’ to describe Buhari. But timidity when it comes to protecting their people has been the character of most of the Northern Muslims who ruled this country. I m not here to discuss the details.
Many commentators are now satisfied that Buhari is going to pay visits to Zamfara, Taraba, Yobe and Benue to commiserate with the people. That, however, is not what we expect from Mr. President. Is the President going to those states to confirm that lawlessness has taken place? Is he going there to lead a military expedition against the Boko Haram in Yobe, the bandits in Zamfara or the ethnic militia in Taraba? Even someone like me who is not a security expert know that Mr. President, being the commander-in-chief of the armed forces can address those issues effectively from Abuja if he decides to do so.
The visits may end up adding salt to the injury. In each of those states he goes, he will be received at the airport by the state governor. Then he will go and pay a courtesy visit to the paramount traditional ruler of the state. He will probably meet with the “opinion leaders” of the state who are carefully selected by the state governor. If there are any victims in the hospital the president will go and visit them. He will most likely pledge to pay all the medical bills. At the meeting with the opinion leaders and the traditional ruler he will appeal to the people to live in peace. 
The governors will not take him to the scene of genocide in the case of Taraba state, or the hideouts of bandits in the case of Zamfara because the governors themselves have not been there. After the President leaves, the crimes will continue.
So Mr. President, please address the security challenges as they should be addressed. If you do, you can attend your weddings and party meetings without any “Allah Ya isa” coming from your people.  

Saturday, 13 January 2018

Fulani “Herdsmen” and the Way Forward



Recently there was an attack in Benue state that claimed many lives. The claim by the state Government is that the attack was carried out by Fulani herdsmen, whatever that means. But this is not the first time lives were lost in Benue due to the problem of clashes between farmers and herders encroaching upon their farmlands. Two years ago there was a similar attack on Agatu community of the same state that claimed many more lives. There are also similar attacks in other parts of the country especially South and North Central states where the pasture is greener.
Like on every issue, Nigerians are divided. First, since the issue has to do with Fulani, a tribe closely associated with Islam, the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) and the Southern press took their side. It is an opportunity to pour out the anti-Islamic venom on an issue that is purely criminal. As a regular reader of online newspapers I always find the headlines of southern newspapers and the comments revealing. They have a regular pattern. From the headline you would know the side taken by the newspaper. The news will be twisted to make you believe what you are required to believe. Then the comments will follow along the same line. If they are not abusing the ‘clueless’, ‘certificateless’, ‘boko haram sponsor’ etc. at the top they are attacking Islam for being a jihadist, blood-spilling religion.
In its contradictory response, CAN accused the Federal Government of protecting the Fulani herdsmen while at same time calling on her to act. They also called for prayer ‘against’ the herdsmen, not for peace as would be expected of a religious body that has followership across all segments of the Nigerian society including herdsmen.
On the same side as CAN and the southern press are the Fani-Kayodes and the Fayoses. Like a Facebook friend observed, Buhari is becoming too soft for the liking of many Nigerians by allowing the likes of Fani-Kayode and Fayose to attack him at every opportunity including an accident involving his child. The security agencies have a responsibility to not only protect Mr. President from bodily harm but also from personal insults that are distinct from constructive criticisms. We are still expecting them to play this part of their role.
On the other side are the Miyetti Allah organization and their sympathizers who would always claim that the herders have the right to open-grazing, impliedly even on farms not belonging to them, because that is their means of subsistence. On this recent one, the Miyetti Allah association claimed that it was in retaliation to the killing of 1000 animals by local militia. The Miyetti Allah has its powerful sympathizers in the social media. For example, a Facebook pal of mine with large number followers would go to any extent to justify whatever is done by Fulani. For many Fulani when a brother is involved there is no principle, no justice but of the kind obtainable among the pre-Islamic Arabs, “help your brother whether he is the oppressor or the oppressed”.
The extremely sentimental kind of reaction by CAN, southern press and others have pushed many Muslims to blindly take side with the Fulani herdsmen even against the Qur’anic injunction of investigating before forming an opinion. My brothers are further emboldened by the arrest of some armed militia allegedly sponsored by the Government of Benue state or some anti-Islamic outfit.  
But the Government is also divided. While the Benue state Government is adamant on anti-open grazing law the Plateau state Government will not use the word ‘anti’ on any ‘business’. The Federal Government will call ‘stake-holders’ conference to iron out the problem. Meanwhile the president has asked the IG to relocate to Benue state and some herdsmen have already been arrested. The contradictions continue.
As a Northerner, especially one with some Fulani blood running in him, there is a side I am expected to take regardless of my first hand experience of dealing with other Nigerians including Fulani herdsmen. Unfortunately I don’t join the bandwagon. Even when I attend meetings, any meetings, I usually express my own opinions which are not necessarily the opinions of any group I am seen to belong. It has been difficult but it gives me satisfaction.
The conflict between herders and farmers is not new. It only became glaring after the Fulani herdsmen as they are now known began moving down south with desert encroachment on our own part of the country. It is well known that our communities in the North West are made up of a mixture of Hausas and Fulani, the former being farmers and the latter being cattle-rearers. The two groups were enjoying peace with very minor disagreements on farm encroachment until somewhere in the 1980s through 1990s when a strange type of herders began to cross our borders and tramp on our farms with their cattle. The menace became pronounced during the Abatcha regime when security forces were in many cases dispatched to tackle them. In one of such cases which I remember very well, when those “Udawa” became a nuisance to farmers around Funtua in Katsina state a team of MOPOL was sent to counter-attack them and most of them were killed and their cows were slaughtered and eaten by their farmer victims in Funtua township. But there was no problem. Both the herdsmen and their victims were “Muslims”. CAN did not call for prayers or condemn Federal Government. The southern press did not carry any catchy headlines as no Christian was involved and life continued.
I believe the Miyetti Allah association does not expect us to take them serious. It is never an excuse to feed your cows with the farm produce of innocent people just because grazing reserves were sold by some Government officials or traditional rulers. It is even more unacceptable to kill human beings because some cattle were stolen. The Sokoto state Governor has offered to give enough land for open grazing. I expected Miyetti Allah to accept the offer and develop the given land for the benefit of their members. This will, in addition to bringing the desired peace, give an opportunity for them to have economic control over the animals and their products in form of beef, hide, manure, etc. That they have not done that keeps me in doubt about their actual motive.
The North West is not in any way more peaceful than North Central or southern states, no thanks to the activities of Fulani cattle rustlers and kidnappers. These criminals have attacked and killed many innocent people and in some cases raped or abducted their families in Zamfara, Katsina and other North Western states. Two years ago I published how my uncle was killed by these criminals after rustling over 350 cows from his village. These cows belonged to innocent villagers who have never encroached on anybody’s farm to feed them. These criminals are still active but because the victims do not make noise and have no trained militia to launch a counterattack it is allowed to continue. What an irony!
That some ethnic militia are being trained to launch attack on ‘us’ is no news. Whole Muslim communities were displaced and their property plundered by these militia in different states of the North. But whose fault is it? Instead of us to train our youth to defend us we abandoned them to be recruited by Boko Haram. The average northern Muslim leader is selfish. He/she only cares about their children. That is why we are overtaken in almost everything including building befitting mosques despite the huge human and material resources at our disposal. And instead of us to look inwards we are blaming others for doing what we have failed to do.
To move forward we have to be frank to ourselves and stop supporting criminals just because they are our blood. The Miyetti Allah association should be creative in helping their members if they do not want us to believe that they are benefitting from these crises.
Finally, President Buhari should address this problem once and for all and if necessary apportion blame and punishment to those responsible. And very importantly, the activities of criminals in the North West have not been properly managed. Is it because we have voted for our own?

Tuesday, 29 August 2017

Rail Lines to Daura and Jibia: Why I am Confused




Since the announcement of the presidential approval for the construction of rail lines to Daura and Jibia among other places, I have been speechless. My wives who have been trying to find out what is wrong with me have not been successful. The duo have known me to be for the man Buhari and I have been able to convince them from the beginning that Buhari is one of the best things to happen to Nigeria. Fortunately, the two of them were not around when Buhari was the military Head of state in the 1980s. Thus, what I told them about the General Buhari regime is what they believe. Of course I did not tell them a lie. Buhari is incorruptible and he did as much as he could as a military leader to force all Nigerians to be like him through his WAI programme, his many decrees and imprisonment of corrupt politicians. But that is where he got it wrong, I have always told them.  It is impossible for all Nigerians, nay majority of Nigerians to become Buharis. The reasons are not for this discussion.
My inability to utter a word on the issue either to my family, friends or in the social media as I usually do is due to the many questions that continue to puzzle my mind. Why these projects at this time when the president is more than half-way to the end of his first and hopefully the last term? Yes, hopefully the last term because those of us who love Buhari would never like him to contest in 2019 even if he gets much better before that date. Our reason is simple. He should stay and manage his health. Of course his ‘supporters’ would never like to hear this. They will continue to prod him to contest even if what remains of him is the skeleton so that the feeding bottle will remain in their mouth.
Another question is, are we witnessing another PDP approach to politics? The PDP understood the weaknesses of Northerners very well and it had always used them to win election. For example, Northerners have a very short memory. The only thing they seem to remember is what is happening now. The PDP thus started projects that have bearing on the life of Northerners few weeks to general elections. Immediately after the elections the projects were abandoned for another three and a half years.  A handy example is the Kano-Kaduna dual carriageway. This road which links the administrative headquarters of the former Northern region to its commercial capital was constructed in the late 1980s by the Babangida administration. Despite being the busiest road in the far North it has been allowed to become a death trap due to lack of maintenance. The PDP administration severally promised to reconstruct it and the Minister of works was always shown on NTA inspecting the road when it was election time. This happened in 2003, 2007, 2011 and 2015. Today the road remains worse than it was 19 years ago. Incidentally, the Buhari administration has made a similar promise but there is nothing on the ground so far.
Assuming that the Buhari administration is serious about carrying out these projects, how realistic are they given the fact that more than half of his term is gone?  It is obvious that given the slow pace with which projects in this part of the country are executed under Buhari administration it could take Buhari not less than five terms of four years to execute the rail projects enumerated by the Minister of transport last week. The case of Kano-Katsina express road is a good example. This project began almost with the Buhari regime but the work was abandoned at Bichi which is a distance of about 30 kilometers out of 160 kilometers. This is happening when projects in the south are executed by this administration at an unbelievable speed.
Now, which is better? To manage what is on the ground or to pursue phantom dreams? The road network in the North is in a state of total disrepair. There is hardly a road linking any two state capitals that is in good condition. Few weeks ago I lost my new tire and nearly my life and lives of some of my family members to portholes along Kano-Dayi road which is the road linking Kano with Zamfara, Sokoto, Kebbi and parts of Katsina state. Hardly will a day pass without an accident on that road just like the much talked about Kano-Maiduguri express road whose construction begins and ends between Kano and Wudil, another distance of 33 kilometres. These observations apply to other roads including Kano-Daura road which links the President’s hometown with the rest of the country. With all these, what makes sense is that our choice Government will do what it can to put back our roads into good condition instead of pursuing vividly unrealistic rail projects.
I still wonder how I can explain my position to my family and friends or even the person reading this. Nigerians are a binary people. Most of them understand only two things, condemnation and praise. A critical observation means condemnation and withdrawal of support. But should we continue to blindly follow?

Wednesday, 28 June 2017

Governor Badaru and the Politicization of Mistakes



During the political campaign that preceded the 2015 general elections, a major challenge confronted Muslim politicians in the then ruling party, the PDP. Muslims, especially Northern Muslims saw any of their brothers campaigning for Jonathan as an outcast. Jonathan was seen as the promoter of Boko Haram because for as long as he remained in power the Boko Haram fire continued to spread to all parts of Northern Nigeria with apparently no will from the President to end it. Added to this was the fact that Jonathan was being challenged by General Muhammadu Buhari, a person considered by Northerners as a messiah who would not only tackle the problem of Boko Haram but restore the good old glory of Nigeria by killing corruption and other political and economic problems  of the country.
This put Muslim politicians in PDP on their toes as the storm gathered. For the small boys at local levels, the practice of printing campaign posters with Buhari picture alongside theirs became the norm. But for the big boys at the centre, they were doing all they could to prove to grassroot voters that they were also practicing Muslims. This made many of them to open their political lectures with long Islamic prayers and quotations from the Qur’an and Hadith. Some of them would go on to warn the public that Buhari’s running mate was a big pastor and that a vote for Buhari would promote the church, and so on. It was in the midst of this imbroglio that the former Vice president, Arc Namadi Sambo at one of their campaign rallies attempted to recite Suratul Fatiha, which is the opening chapter of the Quran. However, to the disappointment of many of his admirers, he failed to recite it properly. And many including my humble self were not surprised. For the western-educated elites of Sambo’s generation, the only opportunity they might have had of learning the Qur’an was at the Qur’anic school of their locality before they went to boarding secondary school. At boarding schools there was no provision to further their knowledge of the Qur’an. The IRK was anything but serious. In fact, the IRK teacher was usually a subject of mockery by the pupils who called him with various names like anakallahu, ustaz, etc. With this background, it is not surprising to be unable to recite the basic parts of the Qur’an correctly.
What is wrong is the way the error was politicized even by people who should know better. I remember a popular columnist who was also a member of APC mentioning the number of errors he found in Sambo’s recitation of Fatiha. Whether he personally met Sambo as his Muslim brother to discuss those mistakes is doubtful.
Dear reader, I m not writing this piece to discuss Sambo and his recitation of Fatiha. I believe by now he must have learnt and corrected his mistakes. This is particularly expected because he is no longer in Government and has more time to dedicate for spiritual development. Employing a Sheikh to teach him Qur’an from the scratch would not be a problem. Luckily, he is from Zaria a city with reputation for Islamic scholarship. In addition to bringing Sambo closer to his creator, it will also make him reappear better whenever he makes public reappearance.
What prompted me to pick my pen is a video clip currently circulating in the social media. This time it is not about a pro-Jonathan politician. It is about Governor Muhammad Badaru of Jigawa state, a prominent figure in the ruling party and a member of its National working committee. The clip was posted to one of the whatsApp groups I belong where I first saw it. Later it has spread like a wild fire as sharing continues. In the video released by Jigawa State New Media Office, the bearded governor is shown struggling to read a poorly written speech on the occasion of honoring Jigawa indigenes that excelled in Qur’anic recitation competition.
As I watched the three minutes clip, what particularly impressed me were the messages the Governor sent. It is the first time, for example, I saw a state Governor offering scholarship to Qur’anic reciters to study in any university of their choice anywhere in the world. In the past such offers were made to footballers and some actors or actresses. The governor also promised to continue supporting Qur’anic education and Qur’anic reciters at both Qur’anic and Islamiyya school levels. And if the governor fulfills the commitment he made in that clip, problems of Education sector shall be solved, at least in Jigawa state. After urging the Jigawa state contingent to represent the state well, he concluded by praying for them in particular and the state in general.
Unfortunately for most of us, we are always looking for mistakes and human beings are always full of mistakes. A big mistake (yes, a big one) was made by the governor in reading that speech. In Islam, there are standards of respect for the prophet (peace upon him), his companions and other figures. In particular, the Prophet (peace upon him) described as a truly stingy person anybody who refuses to pray for him whenever he is mentioned. Thus, it has become part of the average Muslim life to say sallallahu alaihi was sallam (may peace and blessing of Allah be upon him) whenever a mention of Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) is made. When Allah is mentioned it is usual to glorify him (subhanu wa ta’ala). To glorify the Prophet (peace upon him) as done to Allah is abominable and that is exactly what Badaru did. Even if the mistake was made in the speech he was reading, as I would like to believe, it is expected that given his status, His Excellency the Governor should have corrected it. But it is not too late. Allah is forgiving and merciful for those who seek his forgiveness. As for those of us who always politicize the mistakes of others it is better to desist and seek corrective approach. For if APC benefitted from the mistakes of Namadi Sambo, it is now the turn of PDP to use Badaru’s lapse to achieve what politicians want achieve. But what do they achieve?