Hometruths By Adeola Akinremi: Email: adeola.akinremi@thisdaylive.com
I have lived with the trauma of threat
to my life for nearly three years. Every day I see my body lower into
the grave. It’s hard to deal with psychosis of fear. I know firsthand
after I was declared a “walking dead” by Boko Haram militants in 2015.
My wife can tell of how many times I jumped out of bed, running through
the door, but to go nowhere. Living in Nigeria is like living in a
haunted house.
The Boko Haram militants have turned our
lives into horrific hell, yet the only thing the government knows how
to do is to recycle their words.
In Dapchi, no mother wants to hear sorry. In Dapchi, no father is waiting for government delegation. No! They are waiting for their children.
In Dapchi, no mother wants to hear sorry. In Dapchi, no father is waiting for government delegation. No! They are waiting for their children.
So when President Muhammadu Buhari says,
“we are sorry,” following the abduction of more than 100 schoolgirls in
Dapchi last Monday, it is important to let him know that “sorry” will
not take away the worry.
Nigerians home and abroad are tired of recycle words of comfort. Buhari has let our children down and he should take the “sorry” home as he nears the end of his tenure.
Nigerians home and abroad are tired of recycle words of comfort. Buhari has let our children down and he should take the “sorry” home as he nears the end of his tenure.
Nigeria is now a country, where
psychosis of terror war, herdsmen hysteria and fear of all kinds
continue to limit the lifecycle of citizens, because the government is
not honest enough about its incapability.
To cover-up, Nigerians are regaled daily by the military with tales of how it has defeated Boko Haram. The government spokesmen will then go out there to make a spin of false victory.
To cover-up, Nigerians are regaled daily by the military with tales of how it has defeated Boko Haram. The government spokesmen will then go out there to make a spin of false victory.
And when Boko Haram struck in Dapchi,
they lied. They first told citizens that “no schoolgirl was kidnapped”.
The manipulation didn’t work. Then, they echoed something else, telling
Nigerians that “the schoolgirls have been rescued.” As lies beget lies,
they began to tell journalists what to write. They dictated “missing”
schoolgirls—something to cover the other lies, one way of saying it was
not Boko Haram attack.
In the end, the house of cards tumbles and the security agencies began to blame one another for their lapses.
Though, Nigerians cry daily over the perpetual state of fear, the governors and government ministers are crying for Buhari’s re-election. They are less concerned about the cry of grave national emergency.
Though, Nigerians cry daily over the perpetual state of fear, the governors and government ministers are crying for Buhari’s re-election. They are less concerned about the cry of grave national emergency.
On the eight day, since 110 schoolgirls
have been abducted, the president’s party, the All Progressives
Congress, held conclave in Abuja, not for the sake of the abducted
Dapchi schoolgirls, but to prepare the party for 2019 elections. It is a
shame that strategies on how to win next elections will occupy the
minds of political leaders, when parents are in pain in Dapchi.
Naturally, you expect APC to respond
differently to the way the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) responded to
the 2014 abduction of schoolgirls in Chibok community by the Boko Haram
terrorist group, but there was no difference in how APC responded to
Dapchi abduction.
The party leadership is simply
insensitive. The party chiefs gathered for two days to lavish praise on
themselves for massive victory during 2015 elections. The grief in the
country makes no sense to them, clearly.
And this, Buhari who is desperate to contest election again in the face of overwhelming criticism of his administration found his voice amidst the veteran of lies who gathered around him.
And this, Buhari who is desperate to contest election again in the face of overwhelming criticism of his administration found his voice amidst the veteran of lies who gathered around him.
“We must remember that this resounding
success would not have been achieved without the unity of purpose we
exhibited in challenging and defeating an incumbent government. I wish
to individually and collectively thank you all sincerely for believing
in me and remaining steadfast party members despite the distractions and
antics of the opposition,” he said.
Yes, in a robotic statement the
president’s Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Garba
Shehu, issued last Friday, the man who wants to continue to govern
beyond 2019, didn’t admit failure over the abduction of the schoolgirls
in Dapchi. He simply put a patch on a torn jacket, using the same words
we are used to. “The entire country stands as one with the girls’
families, the government and the people of Yobe State,” he said. “We
pray that our gallant armed forces will locate and safely return your
missing family members.”
Enough is enough. Here is the truth that
Mr. President should know. Nigerians are tired of your prayers and
standing with victims. A government that does not care beyond promise
shouldn’t be looked upon for leadership.
It’s so heartbreaking to hear Buhari repeat “the entire country stands as one with the girls’ families,” once again, when dozens of schoolgirls abducted in April 2014 in the town of Chibok in Borno State, are yet to come home to their families.
It’s so heartbreaking to hear Buhari repeat “the entire country stands as one with the girls’ families,” once again, when dozens of schoolgirls abducted in April 2014 in the town of Chibok in Borno State, are yet to come home to their families.
With a promise to end Boko Haram
terrorism, Buhari was elected, but now with another set of schoolgirls
abducted under his own watch in the town of Dapchi in Yobe State, he
didn’t care to take responsibility for not protecting the schoolchildren
from attacks.
The words contained in his press
statement shows we have a president, who perpetually runs from taking
responsibility. For instance, he said “This is a national disaster.” He
didn’t see it as a disgrace to his leadership. And for him to own up to
the truth by acknowledging that his government failed, he expressed pity
for the victims with half-hearted words of “we are sorry…and share your
pain.”
But Buhari will want praise for telling Nigerians that he “immediately dispatched a high-level delegation on a fact-finding visit to the town.”
But Buhari will want praise for telling Nigerians that he “immediately dispatched a high-level delegation on a fact-finding visit to the town.”
He will want adoration for asking “the
security agencies to deploy in full and not spare any effort to ensure
that all the girls are returned safely, and the attackers arrested and
made to face justice.”
What will he say he’s doing in government, if he cannot deploy security agencies?
Sadly, despite the grief of the Dapchi community and Nigerians, police and military are doing what they know how to do best: blame game. They are passing the buck like the president.
What will he say he’s doing in government, if he cannot deploy security agencies?
Sadly, despite the grief of the Dapchi community and Nigerians, police and military are doing what they know how to do best: blame game. They are passing the buck like the president.
“The statement by the Military of formal
handing over of Dapchi town to the Nigeria Police Division in Dapchi is
not correct and untrue, as there was no time that the military informed
the police of their withdrawal, consult or handed over their locations
in Dapchi town to the police,” Sumonu Abdulmaliki, the Yobe State
Commissioner of Police said as a rebuttal to the claim by Onyema
Nwachukwu, spokesman of Operation Lafiya Dole theatre command, who said
troops handed over the town to the police before withdrawing.
Abdulmaliki and Onyema care less about
the grief of families whose children have been abducted. They are
concerned about the image of the organisations they represent.
“Members of the public in Yobe State are
implored to disregard and discountenance this claim that the military
formally handed the security of Dapchi town to the Nigeria Police as
untrue, unfounded and misleading,’ Abdulmaliki added.
Perhaps, the sickening side of event in
the wake of the latest abduction of the schoolgirls is President
Buhari’s struggle with his own identity. It is depressing to see the
president’s mind preoccupied with his own image in a narcissistic way.
At a time the whole world is concerned about the terrible happenings in
Nigeria, the government released a new directive on how Buhari should be
addressed at formal functions. I don’t know the intention behind it,
but it is ill timed.
In suppressing the truth, this week Buhari amused the world when he said, “a number of security challenges still exist, but they exist in even the most well-policed and well-secured countries.”
In suppressing the truth, this week Buhari amused the world when he said, “a number of security challenges still exist, but they exist in even the most well-policed and well-secured countries.”
But the world knows the truth. According
to New York Times, “the troubling details of a kidnapping that unfolded
last week in the rural community of Dapchi in northern Nigeria after
Boko Haram attacked a school and apparently made off with teenage
hostages horrified the nation… Many Nigerians were all the more outraged
that the attack and the events that followed mirrored a similar
kidnapping of nearly 300 schoolgirls in 2014 in the community of Chibok.
That episode grabbed the world’s attention and elicited promises from
officials that it will never happen again. Nearly four years later, an
estimated 112 of those students are still held hostage.”
In an interview published by Germany’s
public international broadcaster, Deutsche Welle, Tsambido Hosea-Abana,
chairman of the Chibok Association in Abuja said, “The government is
trying to conceal the fact that Boko Haram is still causing havoc. The
government spoke just three or four days ago that they have completely
degraded Boko Haram and there is no longer any Boko Haram. Immediately
after their declaration, Boko Haram did such a thing. So they want to
conceal it and state that their version is the truth.”
This is the way AFP sees it. “Boko
Haram’s abduction of more than 100 schoolgirls in Dapchi, northeastern
Nigeria, shows the Islamist group still has the ability and means to
stage major attacks.
Since the raid last Monday, questions have been asked about how heavily armed fighters were able to storm the town in Yobe State without encountering any resistance, then disappear,” reports AFP.
Since the raid last Monday, questions have been asked about how heavily armed fighters were able to storm the town in Yobe State without encountering any resistance, then disappear,” reports AFP.
One expert who spoke with the AFP, Yan
St-Pierre, a counter-terrorism specialist with the Modern Security
Consulting group, said: “If they kidnapped more than 100 girls, that
shows they have sizeable means at their disposal and a secure place to
take them.”
Reuters wrote that “the attack was one
of the largest abductions since the Chibok kidnappings of 2014 in which
more than 250 girls were taken by the Islamist militant group. It has
prompted questions about the ability of security forces to fight
insurgents which the government has repeatedly said have been defeated.”
All in all, just like Goodluck Jonathan,
another clueless president has set up a 12-member committee to find out
how 110 students of the Government Girls’ Science and Technical College
(GGSTC), Dapchi, Yobe State, were kidnapped.
It is clear that this government is
bereft of ideas and the president is just moping around for his
failures. May God protect the Dapchi 110 and not let them become part of
the statistics. Amen.
Side Effects…
Death and Destructions
Grim statistics of death from Lassa fever this week breaks the heart. Nigeria’s Centre for Disease Control said 90 people are suspected to have died from the virus in the last eight weeks alone. There’s a forecast of 1,081 suspected cases. It is sad that preventable death such as Lassa fever continues to kill Nigerians helplessly. Imagine, rats spread Lassa fever and we have no solution to contain it. How can a 50-year-old country not able to address Lassa fever disease for decades. It is a shame to learn that experts from the United Kingdom’s Public Health England and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) are being sent to rescue us. We get foreign experts on every small and big problem. When will Nigeria be able to solve its own problems?
Grim statistics of death from Lassa fever this week breaks the heart. Nigeria’s Centre for Disease Control said 90 people are suspected to have died from the virus in the last eight weeks alone. There’s a forecast of 1,081 suspected cases. It is sad that preventable death such as Lassa fever continues to kill Nigerians helplessly. Imagine, rats spread Lassa fever and we have no solution to contain it. How can a 50-year-old country not able to address Lassa fever disease for decades. It is a shame to learn that experts from the United Kingdom’s Public Health England and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) are being sent to rescue us. We get foreign experts on every small and big problem. When will Nigeria be able to solve its own problems?
Up Kwara!
I took the heading above from the late former governor of Kwara State, Mohammed Alabi Lawal. When he was governor Kwara State from 1999 to 2003, Lawal’s name was bigger than the name of the state. Everywhere you turned; it was Lawal’s signature on everything. That signature, Up Lawal was like leviathan. Now that Kwara has enacted a law prohibiting pension to ex-governors, it is Up Kwara. It means the state is bigger than any name or political dynasty. It is highly recommended. The other states should emulate Kwara.
I took the heading above from the late former governor of Kwara State, Mohammed Alabi Lawal. When he was governor Kwara State from 1999 to 2003, Lawal’s name was bigger than the name of the state. Everywhere you turned; it was Lawal’s signature on everything. That signature, Up Lawal was like leviathan. Now that Kwara has enacted a law prohibiting pension to ex-governors, it is Up Kwara. It means the state is bigger than any name or political dynasty. It is highly recommended. The other states should emulate Kwara.
Terror of a Night
The abduction of a journalist wife, her son and the killing of an FRSC officer who responded to the woman’s SOS message in Kaduna is barbaric. It is another sign of the bad times in Nigeria. So the residence of Nasir Birnin-Yero, Voice of America reporter was attacked overnight on Wednesday by about 30 abductors according to News Agency of Nigeria, and there was no security operative anywhere to stop them. Sad!
The abduction of a journalist wife, her son and the killing of an FRSC officer who responded to the woman’s SOS message in Kaduna is barbaric. It is another sign of the bad times in Nigeria. So the residence of Nasir Birnin-Yero, Voice of America reporter was attacked overnight on Wednesday by about 30 abductors according to News Agency of Nigeria, and there was no security operative anywhere to stop them. Sad!
Buhari’s Buzz Words
“It’s a big disgrace for Nigeria. It is now Cameroon and Chad fighting the insurgency more than Nigeria. We will build the capacity and Nigeria should be able to secure its territorial integrity.”—Muhammadu Buhari, in an interview with Reuters, February 6, 2015
“It’s a big disgrace for Nigeria. It is now Cameroon and Chad fighting the insurgency more than Nigeria. We will build the capacity and Nigeria should be able to secure its territorial integrity.”—Muhammadu Buhari, in an interview with Reuters, February 6, 2015
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