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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, November 2, 2016
Could the Nigerian #Bringbackourgirls campaign be merely a political stunt?
The critics cite as hints to the puzzles, the fact that the principal of the kidnapped girls’ school, instead of being censored or reprimanded for negligence, was rewarded. Following some months after the kidnapping of the girls the school principal Asabe Kwambura was compensated with a plum government job as Bornu State’s Board of Education Commissioner. Another point which the critics make is that only a few weeks after Buhari publicly expressed helplessness in the matter and requested for UN’s help, a part of the girls, 53 of them were released by their captors.
( October 29, 2016, New York City, Sri Lanka Guardian) President
Muhammadu Buhari led his country’s delegation to the United Nations
71st General Assembly meeting in September, 2016 in New York. During the
meeting Buhari requested from UN’s Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to
help Nigeria negotiate with the Islamic terrorist group Boko Haram for
the release of the abducted Chibok school girls. The alleged abduction
of about 276 high school girls in April 2014 from their school in the
middle of the night made news headlines around the world. It was further
publicized through the Twitter hashtag; #Bringbackourgirls. When the
wife of the United States President Michelle Obama joined the campaign
on Twitter to condemn the dastard inhumane act of the Islamist
terrorists the news went viral worldwide. Pressures came from several
quarters to bear on the then Nigerian government of President Goodluck
Jonathan to expedite efforts at trying to free the captured girls from
the jihadists.
Boko Haram’s leader Abubakar Shekau did not make things easier either
when he boasted that he would sell the girls into sex slavery and do
worse things to them. It did not take very long for him to make good his
threats. Based on the horrific stories of some of the girls who were
said to have escaped from their captors and, especially those of a
particular girl who fortunately, could not detonate the explosive device
with which she was laden in the marketplace; some of the people’s worst
fears were finally confirmed. It became clear that Boko Haram was using
some of the girls for their suicide bombing missions in markets and
other public places. As the girls’ ordeals continued, the international
community held its breath, wishing for some spectacular rescue mission
to happen. Some people expected something, maybe similar to the famous
Israelis’ 90-Minute rescue mission in Uganda’s Entebbe Airport in July,
1976. Sadly, and to the prolonged pain of the girls, the parents and the
country, no such thunderbolt mission was forthcoming. Jonathan’s
government became discredited.
With a built up frustration which turned into outrage there was a
worldwide condemnation of the Nigerian government of Jonathan, a
Christian president from the south for being unable to rescue the girls.
So, the prevailing local and international anger set the stage for the
need for the emergence of a Nigerian political messiah whose path was
prepared by the pains and griefs of the captured girls’ families and a
host of well-wishers scattered all over the world. At this point, any
impostor; the devil himself or better still, an unschooled former
dictator whose only credential is his place of origin, would have filled
in that position of the anticipated Nigerian redeemer. Coming from and
representing the section of the country which believes they are born to
rule the rest peoples of the Nigerian union, Muhammadu Buhari was very
qualified to be that redeemer. The most important thing that this
Nigerian savior, as most saviors, needed to offer was a promise of
future redemption both of the girls and a country without corruption in a
future time. Though, in no time it became glaring that there was a
major difference between the Nigerian savior and most other saviors, it
did not matter anyway.
An important qualification of most saviors is eloquence or the ability
to use words and say the right things at the right time in a coherent
and comprehensive manner. But a Nigerian savior, because of where he
comes from and the powerful people backing him, could mumble some
unintelligible nonsense and the rest of the world which thinks that
“Nigerians” do not know the difference would cheer. In the opinion of
those cheering, a Nigerian or an African savior does not really need
intelligible words to communicate with citizens or to participate at the
world stage in discussions of international concerns. The body
language, not verbal language of a Nigerian and other African leaders is
enough. These great deciders who back these African saviors know what
is best for Africans, after all.
Perhaps it was surmised that the kidnapped girls’ ordeals did not need
any verbal explaining. Everyone already knew all there was to know about
them. So, whoever that had the guts to (or at least promised to do
these things in a future time) rescue the captured girls from the
Sambisa Forest (one of Boko Haram’s strongholds) and can also destroy
the well-known Nigerian problem of corrupt and sharp practices with the
same blow, such a person is qualified to become Nigeria’s president. In
the opinion of the great deciders, Nigeria’s complex problems can
conveniently be reduced to just one: Corruption. Corruption has been
“accepted” as the only thing responsible for all the deplorable human
conditions, poverty, social and political crisis that are endemic in the
Nigerian country. Therefore, Nigeria’s leadership candidate did not
need to verbally articulate the problem’s ramifications and how he
intended to solve it, everyone already knows.
However, just to satisfy some who still doubted and avoid making the
whole charade to appear too simplistic, some superficial or maybe
mischievous? analysts of the Nigerian problem also added leadership
failure to the list of reasons for Nigeria’s failure. It had long been
agreed to by all the “expert” analysts of Nigeria who “know the best,”
that the faulty colonial structure of a united Nigeria should never be
broached as the probable cause of the country’s failure as a nation
state. It is more convenient to blame leadership failure and political
corruption that are mere symptomatic effects of the real problem which
is colonial structural failure. Yet, the truth is that the faulty
colonial state structure is the foundational problem of the Nigerian
country. But hitherto, the great deciders are still to accept this
immutable truth; that Nigeria needs to be divided into smaller countries
in order to solve Nigeria.
Muhammadu Buhari the man who will kill the Nigerian corruption
Buhari the current anointed Nigerian savior was a former military
dictator who ruled Nigeria between 1983 and 1985. Through a coup d’état
Buhari ousted the elected government of his fellow Muslim northerner
Shehu Shagari. (It had long been established that the coup d’état was
carried out to prevent Shagari’s Christian Vice-President Alex Ekwueme
from becoming the next president after Shagari.) During the period of
his rule, Buhari’s government began a program which was termed “war
against indiscipline” and the public was flogged into lines and
frog-jumped by mean-looking soldiers. Therefore, he was considered a
tough leader and an easy choice by those who were eager for a Nigerian
change. The efforts of Buhari’s horsewhip wielding soldiers who also
pulled down people’s business and private buildings that were termed
illegal structures were complemented by those of the special armed
mobile police force infamously called “kill-and-go” by the locals.
Though, Buhari in the opinion of many Nigerian experts is an epitome of a
typical corrupt Nigerian leader “of the first order,” yet change
mongers who were anxious to duplicate the American “Obama change” in
Nigeria wanted change by all means. Despite the fact that there are
abundant public records of Buhari’s unsavory corrupt trails, his backers
like himself believe in Buhari’s private personal interpretation of
what corruption is. By his private definition, the universally
acknowledged corrupt former Nigerian maximum military ruler Sani Abacha
“was not corrupt.” By this incredible declaration, like the legendary
king of old, Buhari has been dancing naked in the public to the Nigerian
corruption music while wearing an invisible garment which he believes
perfectly covers his dirty corrupt warts from public view. With such
false public image of the untainted Nigerian saint who was beatified by a
gullible college of blind cardinals, Buhari became the mythical
quintessential Nigerian tough saint-ruler who would kill the Nigerian
corruption because “himself, like Abacha is not corrupt.”
Sending an S.O.S. to the United Nations
In the meantime, many watchers saw President Buhari’s request to the
United Nations to help Nigeria negotiate the release of the Chibok girls
as reading from a rehearsed political script; a gimmick. His critics
believe that the request was planned and delivered at an appropriate
time and place to produce the desired dramatic effect. It was meant to
refresh the mind of the international community on the unfolding
political drama in Nigeria. The suspense was thus heightened and the
audience was like told to expect the next big thing on the agenda – the
release of the kidnapped girls. It was seen by most observers of the
Nigerian political scene as a ploy or a sort of mockery of the global
community’s collective intelligence.
However that maybe, it’s expected that the joke would not be completely
lost on the UN and other members of the international community. No
matter what, there will always be some who can read between the lines.
Nonetheless, it is clear that President Buhari and his handlers have
convinced themselves that the whole world will always collectively fall
under the spell of the religious/political antics of the Islamists of
northern Nigeria. From all indications northern Nigerian Muslim
fundamentalist, like their counterparts in other parts of the world have
come to believe that they can actually succeed in “fooling all the
people all the time.”
The emergence of Boko Haram
The Islamic terrorist group Boko Haram emerged about a decade and half
ago as a militant pressure group conceived to violently enforce the
political and religious mandates of Nigeria’s Islamic north. Just before
the emergence of Boko Haram group; as a political block, the north
adopted the Islamic sharia as its legal system. Now, sharia runs pari
passu in the northern region with the presumed Nigerian secular
constitutional legal system. Part of Boko Haram’s declared goal is to
maintain a tight-fit Islamic hegemony over the entire country or when
that is not possible to create an Islamic state out of the present
Nigerian country. Which is why when the former Nigerian President Musa
Yar’Adua, a Muslim northerner died in office and his vice president
Goodluck Jonathan, a Christian southerner replaced him, the north vowed
to take back the leadership of the country at all costs. A northern
representative Lawal Keita declared: “We will make Nigeria ungovernable
for Jonathan. Anything short of a northern president is tantamount to
stealing our presidency. Jonathan has to go and he will go . . . he will
be frustrated out of office.”
Before being elected president, Buhari warned Jonathan’s government when
it planned an expanded military pressure on Boko Haram strongholds in
the northeast. Especially after the kidnapping of the Chibok girls,
Buhari said that northerners would view attacks on Boko Haram as attacks
on the northern region. In the same token, some critics have often
analyzed the circumstances that surrounded the well-publicized captured
Chibok school girls, and concluded that it was an elaborate political
web of deceit weaved by the Islamic north to wrest power from a southern
Christian president.
The critics cite as hints to the puzzles, the fact that the principal of
the kidnapped girls’ school, instead of being censored or reprimanded
for negligence, was rewarded. Following some months after the kidnapping
of the girls the school principal Asabe Kwambura was compensated with a
plum government job as Bornu State’s Board of Education Commissioner.
Another point which the critics make is that only a few weeks after
Buhari publicly expressed helplessness in the matter and requested for
UN’s help, a part of the girls, 53 of them were released by their
captors. There was no indication that United Nations negotiators were
involved in helping to free the girls. Nigeria’s Vice-President declared
that the girls’ freedom was not obtained by any military force or
through the swapping of any captured Boko Haram fighters. Soon after the
first batch of girls was released the administration’s spokespersons
boasted that more girls would still be freed. Now, people are asking why
the sudden change of heart by Boko Haram? The freed girls were in
captivity for over two years and were supposed to have been married off,
given away or sold into sex slavery for that period. Yet of those who
came back, except one none had babies, pregnancies or any visible
physical signs of severe sexual abuses.
After considering the above points and more, most critics insist that the whole campaign;
#Bringbackourgirls may have been a mere political practical joke
contrived by Nigeria’s Muslim north to take back the country’s
leadership. It is believed to be a web of lies which unwittingly caught
off guard many notable international personalities like the wife of the
President of the United States of America, United Nations Ban Ki-moon
and many others. Without knowing it, these otherwise decent people may
have been taken for a ride, dragged and sullied in the muddy waters of
the Nigerian political conundrum.