#Civil Rights
Target:
United States, France, UK and Israel.
Region:
Nigeria

The recent spate of bombings and maiming is now news to Nigerians and The Global community at large.
Boko Haram made its presence known in 2004, in Yobe State.

And by 2011, it made its presence known to the global community by bombing the United Nations headquarters in Abuja. Especially in the last two years, it has wilfully attacked hundreds of buildings and killed many innocent Nigerians. Until recently, very few – including the Nigerian security and intelligence agencies – knew very little about the group’s origin and philosophy, its raison d’être, and its goals and endgame. Eight years after it came into existence, and in spite of the calamity the group has caused, the government seems not to know how to clip the group’s wings.

The domestic and global implications of Boko Haram on Nigeria are what concern me this week. On the home front, other groups may be emboldened by Boko Haram’s extrajudicial adventures. Seeing that the group is running circles over security and intelligence agencies in the country, they may be tempted to take to the streets instead of expressing their grievances through the appropriate channel. And of course, there may be copycats who may deem it fun to outgun and outman the government.

Second, Boko Haram’s successes make the security agencies look inept. As a result, there is a growing perception that the police and their allied organisations are weak, corrupt, and poorly trained. Above all, it paints these units as cowards who are unable to arrest, dismantle, and bring to justice a ragtag group running wild at the edge of the Sahara Desert. This perception, whether true or not, will most likely have a negative impact on the trust and confidence level of those who see the police as their defenders.

Third, the daily trouncing of the security and intelligence services is likely to have a demoralising impact. Low-ranking members may begin to doubt the ability of their leaders to make the right calls; and the senior ranks too may begin to doubt the vision and the ability of their superiors. These and other factors are likely to have a negative impact on the cohesiveness of the security and intelligence agencies. In addition, civilians and non-civilians may begin to doubt the leadership capability of the government.

What’s more, a government that can’t, or that is unable to secure lives and property, will find it difficult to govern or command respect from the electorate. In the end, therefore, the stature of the President will diminish: he is likely to be seen as weak, lazy, incompetent, and undeserving of his office. This may further lead to a crisis of leadership. Considering the history of Nigeria, this may trigger extrajudical takeover of government by the military or other forces, which is very undesirable.

And finally, the incessant bombings may lead to equivalent retaliation: Boko Haram (a Northern group) may provoke one or two other groups or groups of individuals in the South to avenge the killing of their brethren – or the bombing of their churches. On the other hand, if Boko Haram were to bomb Lagos, such an act would most likely provoke equivalent retaliation and mass exodus of Nigerians of northern extraction from Lagos and adjacent cities/states. And if the bombing and counter-bombings are prolonged, the country may witness pre-1967 conditions.

A pre-1967 condition will give rise to nationwide political instability. We already know that unstable political spaces are characterised by uncertainty, unpredictability, and suffocating apprehension and, ultimately, to economic deficits. For a country that is vastly underdeveloped, another bout of instability is likely to push it to the brink of anarchy and collapse. In the end, therefore, one of the unintended consequences of the Boko Haram’s rampage may be the weakening of the state or the breakup of the country. Prolonged anarchy or the breakup of the country will definitely have a dire consequence on the African continent and beyond.

Secondly, without being told, one can safely deduce that Nigerian and foreign governments are watching the in and outflow of cash and weapons and ideologies into Northern Nigeria. The concern here is the importation and exportation of terrorism. The proximity of Northern Nigeria to Chad and Niger and other alleged hotbeds of fundamentalism has been a concern to western governments for many years. Related to the issue of terrorism is the safety of foreigners living in Nigeria.

A fourth and final consequence is the fact that the ongoing bombings make President Goodluck Jonathan appear incompetent (in the estimation of western capitals). (Did I even hear in some quarters that he was rejected as the African Union chairman last weekend in preference to Boni Yayi of Benin Republic, even though the Presidency denied such reports yesterday?) While criminality and terrorism are global scourges, many countries have mechanisms in place to deal with such. It does not bode well for Nigeria when week after week, and month after month, Boko Haram operates at will. Should this continue unabated for several more months, Foreign Direct Investments in Nigeria are likely to decrease. And this has wider implications for a government that has promised its citizens transformation!

Nigerians are crying aloud with one voice, Enough is Enough!

And as such we are soliciting the support of the International community to help comb this menace; our Integrity and Unity as a nation is been jeopardised here.

It now seems our policy makers are incompetent to deliver us!

I solicit all peace loving Nigerians to will-fully sign this petition to herald and usher in a new Nigeria.

Yes we must get the Million signatory target!

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The Nigerians Says No More to Insurgencies and Bombings (A Direct SOS To The West) petition to United States, France, UK and Israel. was written by Okagbare Christopher and is in the category Civil Rights at GoPetition.

Petition Tags

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