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Buhari |
The policy of militarism
and militarization adopted and intensified by the civilian dictatorial
Presidency of Gen Muhammadu Buhari has in the past one year and three months
given birth to 18 armed opposition groups (AOGs) or non-State armed groups in
Nigeria. That is to say that the number of non-State armed groups or groups
that have taken up arms against the Federal Republic of Nigeria under Gen
Muhammadu Buhari has risen from two before 29th of May 2015 to 20 as at August 2016. It further means that 18
non-State armed groups have risen in Nigeria in the past 15months under the
Presidency of Gen Muhammadu Buhari.
Going by the 2016
records of the wars-in-the-world organization and the
public security & safety advocacy department of Intersociety, there
are ongoing internal conflicts in 28 African countries involving 220 armed
opposition and other asymmetric groups; out of which the Democratic Republic of
Congo (DRC) has the highest number of active armed opposition groups with 36;
followed by Libya with 28; South Sudan with 26 and Nigeria with 20. This means
that Nigeria is now the Africa’s fourth largest armed opposition country.
Nigeria moved from its 13th position in May 2015 to fourth position in
August 2016; a period of 15 months.
Other African countries
with large number of armed opposition groups (AOGs) are Sudan 19, Mali 17,
Central African Republic (CAR) 10, Egypt 9, Ethiopia 8, Algeria 4, Eritrea 4,
Somaliland 4, Uganda 3, Mauritania, Kenya, Chad and Angola 2 each and Western
Sahara, Tunisia, Senegal, Rwanda, Congo Republic, Puntland, Mozambique, Ivory
Coast, Djibouti, Cameroon and Burundi have one armed opposition group each.
As at May 2015, the number of active armed opposition groups (AOGs) in Nigeria was two: Boko Haram and Fulani terror groups; funded by radical northern politicians with strong links to serving officers of northern Muslim extraction in the Nigerian security forces. Armed Opposition Groups such as Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) and the Niger Delta Volunteer Force (NDVF) were disarmed, demobilized and amnestied in 2009 under the late Umaru Yar’adua Presidency. There was also a splinter group of Boko Haram called Ansaru, which was later, incorporated into Boko Haram under Islamic State West Africa (ISWA).
But presently under the
presidential watch of Gen Muhammadu Buhari and barely 15 months of his civilian
dictatorial administration, the number of these armed opposition groups (AOGs)
has gone viral, increasing from two to 20. Today, there are (1) Islamic State
West Africa and the Movement for Unity & Jihad in West Africa( offshoots of
ISIS and Al-Qaida in Islamic Maghreb), (2) Islamist Boko Haram terror group,
(3) Islamist Fulani terror group or Fulani Janjaweed, (4) resurrected and
re-armed Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, (5) Niger Delta
People’s Volunteer Force, (6) Niger Delta Liberation Front, (7) Niger Delta
Avengers, (8) Biafra Avengers, (9) Red Egbesu Water Lions, (10) Asawana Deadly Force
of the Niger Delta, the Adaka Biafra Marine Commandos, (11) the Utorogon
Liberation Movement, (12) Joint Niger Delta Liberation Force, (13) Joint
Revolutionary Council of the Joint Niger Delta Liberation Force, (14) the Red
Scorpion, (15) Ultimate Warriors of the Niger Delta, (16) the Niger Delta Red
Squad, (17) Niger Delta Vigilante, (18) the Niger Delta Greenland Justice
Mandate, (19) the Ijaw/Oduduwa Militant Movement ( in Ogun/Lagos axis) and (20)
the Middle Belt Christian Militants (rising).
These armed opposition
groups do not include traditional criminal gangs or entities (i.e. armed
robbery or abduction gangs) or criminal entities against persons and
properties. Thousands of community and States vigilante groups and other
summary group violent entities in Nigeria are also excluded.
Technically speaking, armed
opposition groups (AOGs) are a group of suppressed or oppressed citizens of
a political territory who take up arms against a political territory or a part
thereof for the purpose of achieving desired objectives usually politico-religious,
politico-economic, politico-demographic, politico-geographic, politico-ethnic
or for the purpose of addressing age-long asymmetric injustice or
structural violence.
At the State level,
Nigeria is also the third largest defense and security spender in Africa with
about $4B (or N800B) after Algeria ($10.4B) and Angola ($6B). Average of N300B
is spent on the Nigeria Police Force annually. In Nigeria’s arms spending,
approximately 50% or more goes to small arms and light weapons. Through the
State’s illicit use of SALWs in the past 15 months, the Buhari Presidency has
killed over 1300 unarmed and innocent citizens including as much as 250 pro
Biafra activists, who are mainly IPOB activists as well as 809 Shiite Muslim
faithful. Over 300 pro Biafra activists and their supporters have also been
shot and critically wounded using State’s small arms and light weapons. There
is no single evidence that the victims have individually or collectively used
or advocated violence against the State or any part thereof till date.
The Chinese conflict
theorists and experts have always maintained that conflict is an
opportunity to change; meaning that conflict is neither negative nor
positive, but its positivity or negativity is determined by the approaches
adopted in handling it. Modern criminologists and military scientists
also see institutionalization and intensification of policy of militarism
(act of seeking violent solution to social conflicts or problems or practices
that regard war or its preparation as normal or desirable practice) and
militarization ( an act by which a militant or violent political territory
militarize the polity or increase the influence of the military on
all levels of the society) as a counter-productive in managing modern
conflict; be it demographic, geographic, economic, political, cultural,
agro-religious, ethnic or politico-military.
We had warned the Buhari
administration few weeks after it came on board to demilitarize itself and its policies,
but it would not listen. The resurgence and escalation of militancy in the
Niger Delta was solely owing to crude and violent governance approaches adopted
by its administration particularly when it rained bombs of assorted lethal
types including suspected napalm bombs on the creeks of the Niger Delta few
weeks after it was sworn in, claiming that once a general is always a
general! In a quickest response, the Niger Delta was re-militarized and
re-radicalized till date. The Buhari administration further goofed abominably
when it opened fire on innocent and unarmed protesters and other jubilant pro
Biafra activists and impeached the 1999 Constitution which guaranteed right to
peaceful and nonviolent assemblies. These were the beginning of reprisal radicalization
and solidarity counter-violence erupting from right, left and centre of Nigeria
till date.
With the way things are
going, the number of armed opposition groups will record more increases in
coming months particularly following the increased attacks against rural and
urban Christians and their places of worship in Nigeria and total failure of
the government to act as well as its connivance with the perpetrators.
Possibility of affected third parties forming anti Muslim and anti Fulani Janjaweed
armed groups to checkmate the raging attacks against rural and urban Christians
and their places of worship in Nigeria is becoming a reality as days go by.
Unless the Buhari administration begins to dismantle and demilitarize its crude
militarism and militarization policies and governance approaches, otherwise
Nigeria is dooming to be doomed!
Signed:
For: International Society for Civil Liberties & the Rule of Law
Emeka Umeagbalasi, Board
Chairman
Obianuju Igboeli, Esq.,
Head, Civil Liberties & Rule of Program
Chinwe Umeche, Esq.,
Head, Democracy & Good Governance Program
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