The nation is dying. The
time for false pride is over. If this nation lacks the necessary technical
resources, then there remains only one blameless, overdue recourse: “Get Help,
Mr. President!”
Continuing, Soyinka said:
“LAND GRAB WILL BE REVERSED!” This is
the first governance pronouncement, the first pertinent proclamation from the
Presidency since the herdsmen national affliction began.
Catastrophically
belated, it has finally emerged from the constricted throat of a government
that seemed unaware that its very corporate existence was under strangulation.
Many in this nation have had bitter cause to conclude that governance had
indeed expired, its elected head in a trance.
”It is not that long ago
when I demanded that this declaration of intent – the reversal of land
expropriation through mass murder –be made, and that the triumphalist
beneficiaries of such obscene occupation agenda be openly given a deadline to
self-evacuate, or be forcefully evicted. ”However, a commitment is now firmly
in hand, but enforcement is all, so is the tempo of enforcement. Statements of
outrage, humane sentiment, empathy, even visitations to afflicted areas are
natural expectations from government, and perfectly in order.
They are essential
indications of concern and solidarity, even of admissions of lapses. They offer
glimmerings of eventual measures of equity and restitution – of which we must
never lose sight – else community sinks into despair, or enters the
interminable spiral of reprisals. ”Visible pragmatic measures additionally
assist in bolstering the optimism of victims, enable them to feel that they
have not been abandoned.
Such are the relocation of security commands to
vulnerable zones, deployment of Special Forces and attack helicopters etc. etc.
– yes – all these are mandatory measures, it is their absence that constitute
unpardonable negligence.
Long term propositions,
such as establishment of ranches, restriction of cattle movements, cultivation
of fast growth grasses and so on – they all indicate far-sighted planning. They
deserve approbation, but they are not exclusively remedial.
Certain
unconscionable events have taken place, and cannot be ignored. Entire
communities have been erased from the national landscape. Thousands of family
units are in mourning, survivors scarred and traumatized beyond measure. Famine
looms in many areas, even in those lodged in acknowledged bread baskets of the
nation.
Impunity, gleeful and
prideful impunity substitutes for decent self-distancing from once unthinkable
crimes – let us not even speak of expressions of remorse and human empathy.
The instigators, increasingly fingered as directors of human carnage are
strutting around, defiant, justifying the unspeakable, daring a nation – there
is no other word for it – daring governments and nation to attempt to reverse
their categorization of communities as culpable, sentenced and deserving of
some of the most revolting, onslaughts of ethnic cleansing that this nation has
ever undergone.
Once, when we spoke of
internal colonialism, we referred merely to the military seizure of a people’s
political will. Today, that phrase has taken on a bruiaing physicality –
seizures of a people’s land patrimony and the abrogation of their centuries old
resource of material survival. ”What is the ultimate destination of these new
imperators? The answer is unambiguous: Land. The seizure of land either for
seasonal grazing, for the lordly passage of cattle, or for permanent
settlement. The rights of passage no matter the cost.
This is what makes
noteworthy this new language of objective appraisal, one that is indicative of
remedial action. ”When President Buhari complains – see today’s media report,
June 27 – that it is unjust for the public to accuse him of being silent on the
killer herdsmen, that is exactly to what they referred – the erstwhile language
of complacency and accommodativeness in the face of unmerited brutalization.
”Buhari had yet to speak in the language that these murdering herdsmen
understand – simply, that forceful seizure of land will not be tolerated in any
part of a federation under his governance.
That the temporary
acquisition of weapons of mass
elimination by any bunch of psychopaths and anachronistic feudal mentality will
not translate into subjugation of a people and a savaging of their communities.
That any such gains are illusory and temporary and will be reversed. The
plaint of ‘injustice’ is a misjudgmentof the injustice done directly to the
victims, and vicariously to the rest of us who turn to the news with dread
every day, wondering what new stomach-churning accounts of the gory agenda on
their humanity will replace the normal concourse of humanity.
That language, A to Z –
Adamawa to Zamfara – symbolizes and encompasses the Nigerian alphabet of a new
language, and it is anyone’s guess whose lettering will next scorch the minds
even of far distanced strangers. And, if I may confess a personal note, we are
not all outsiders to this geography of collective being, and its alphabet. B – for BarkinLadi- for instance, a serene,
hospitable town was one of the favourite waystops of my research days across
the nation at the very time that the nation took her early faltering steps into
independence- in the early sixties.
Distanced by time,
BarkinLadi nevertheless remains part of a personal, fond, formative family. Is
it that same BarkinLadi that has been put to the torch after the slaughter of
her people? My people? If I visit BarkinLadi tomorrow, will I recognize any
landmark of my knowledge seeking trajectory? ”Quickly, let it be stressed, this
sense of violation is anything but personal. Till now the language of
governance has been constructed from the mangled alphabetism of the Inspector
General of Police who earlier dismissed creeping genocide as neighbourhood
clashes.
It has been thrust into
the curriculum by a Minister of Defence, Mansur Mohammed Dan-Ali – now Minister
of an undeclared Adult Educational Re-Orientation – who, again and again,
savages already ravaged sensibilities with his distortion of a national
catastrophe as a deserving consequence of a state’s legislative answer to an
already manifested outrage. ”If ever an individual qualified to be the
guinea-pig for testing the outrageous hate bill speech contemplated byour
legislators, it is the unedifying pronoucements of that Minister of Defence,
who continues to defend the indefensible through his arrogant, provocative
dismissals of an agenda of ethnic cleansing, dehumanizing the victims anew, and
camouflaging the failure of government by his gratuitous blame-passing.
The language of the
Dan-Ali, a Brigadier-General of the Nigerian Armed Forces, is a language that
is now being contradicted by the meaning of LAND GRABBING SHALL BE REVERSED. So
which is the true heartspeak of this government? That question is now
catapulted to the fore even by this long avoided, and pro-active newspeak of
government.
”The answer will be in
the act, and its tempo. It will be judged also in the continued retention of
such an unreformable enemy of democracy, sense and justice, one who gives joy
to proven killers, who flaunts a temerity to order state governments to
abrogate their own rights to enact laws for the protection of their citizens!
The urgency is
oppressive. It was revealed to me only last week that the former Secretary to
the government, OluFalae, whose ordeal of being kidnapped by these same
marauders is still fresh in the nation’s mind, is still under siege by the same
forces.Neither he nor his workerscan routinely attend to Falae’s farms, being
under constant harassment by herdsmen. How could this happen, be happening, to
us after the learning spell of the yet unfinished business of Boko Haram? ” In
these matters, need I stress? –timing is all, and that timing translates in
that ancient language of – ‘a stitch in time’! An aggressor who sniffs, however
faintly, the permissive air of immunity, is near totally beyond recall.
Only the stern language of reprimand,
manifested in act, will deter him. The price of desultoriness is serial
forfeiture of more than lives, hence the agony into which Nigerians have been
repeatedlyplunged. The leaders of Myetti Allah are self-vaunting instigators in
the nation’s herder colonization. ”Going by their utterances alone, their
ultimatum to state governors to reverse their grazing laws or else – it is
clearly not cows that need to be fenced, but Myetti to be caged. We are
speaking of a recent human body count of close to two hundred, and the Myetti
gang’s retort that three hundred of their cows have been rustled.
”Do I need to repeat here
my earlier commentary on the Myetti and its allies, an assessment daily
reinforced by that demonic breed. I think it is necessary, since the same
language is being promoted by the Minister of Defence on behalf of his
government.
Repeal this law, they
demand, we shall settle for nothing less! They defy such laws, then proceed to
demonize the affected state governments by twisting the order of events: the
killing happens, they claim, because of what was put in place – in response to
killing! ”Did you ever encounter a more cynical rendition of the sequence of
cause-and-effect? A nation has been placed on the defensive…… I am not aware
that that Myetti demagogue, the upside-down historian of first settlers and the
antiquated logic of conquest, that illiterate mouther so filled with his sense
of power and confidence of impunity – I am not aware that he has ever been
called for questioning.
Mr. President, do you know what I strongly
believe? This recent planned massacre had a numerical target. The latest
killing spree is the formal annunciation of a new law. From now on, for every
missing, maimed, even legally seized cow -perhaps for trespassing and damage –
one human being shall die, and commensurate land shall be forfeited.
Make no mistake, that is
the message!Berom or Ondo, Tiv or Efik. Egba or Igalla – it makes no difference
– this is the language, and if your government does not understand it yet, we,
whose field is language, both spoken and symbolic, must decode it for you.
Myetti Allah has spoken. It has inscribedthis new law across the landscape in
bloody lettering.
Add to this, a study in
complementarity: the five young men recently sentenced to death by a High court
of sorts in Zamfara – for allegedly killing a herdsman. We do not condone
murder in any cause – let that be stated clearly – neither in any cause nor by
anyone, and will always uphold the course of justice which, we equally insist,
must remain transparent and impartial.
The agitating question
then is this: since this rampage began, has even one herdsman been brought up
before those same courts on a charge of murder, much less sentenced to death at
such lightning speed? Shall we wake up and find that they have been hanged? Yet
Zamfara has lost hundreds to the homicidal orgy of these same herdsmen. ”There
is a skewed application of justicial proceeding here that baffles many, this
writer among them. And now we learn that the survivors of overwhelmed,
fireballed communities, and their apprehensive neighbours, are being deprived
of even their paltry defensive weapons by army units sent to zones of carnage.
When I visited the
governor of Benue state some weeks ago, he bitterly lamented that security
agencies have even ordered his communities to surrender even the very machetes
of routine use in farming. ”The logic of this eludes one. The JTF – the
so-called Junior Task Force, made up of civilians – has been working hand in
hand with the Nigerian army in the liberation of communities overrun by Boko
Haram, complementing overstretched military capabilities.
Their operations have
gone beyond even self-defence and include aggressive pursuit of their
aggressors. Like the army, they have bravely taken losses. So why are these
victims of cattle overlords not encouraged, even assisted to defend
themselves?
Community policing is a
basic right of society and, where needed with whatever weaponry is available to
them` The community knows itself, the members know one another, and all know
their terrain.Could the military save BarkinLadi?
More pertinently, can the
military protect EVERY VILLAGE in the fast expanding territory of cattlemen
terror? When can Olu Falae resume the simple, ruminant existence of a former
civil servant who has opted for an imagined conflict-free existence?
The Danjuma thesis – defend yourselves! – is neither new nor
strange, it is simply a restatement of the logicality of human response in the
face of aggression, and one is grateful for the authoritativeness of military
experience that is behind it, and a trained on-the-spot capability for
assessment from within. ”Yes, the land-grab must be reversed, but the restored
will still require to be defended, and aggressors also served a lasting lesson
both from the manifested responsibility of governance, and the resistant will
of the people.
Accounting for crimes is
also part of that responsibility, and such criminality must not be seen to be
rewarded through idealistic solutions that paper over crimes against humanity.
For that is the present actuality.
Crimes against our
humanity have been committed, and restitution must be made. Nothing less will
restore confidence in a government, and reassure the people of its
integrity,its commitment to equity in internal relationships and the rightful
custodianship of ancient resources.”
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