29th
March, 2017
PRESS RELEASE:
BUHARI’S PROPOSED VISIT TO SAMBISA POORLY MANAGED
The
Nigerian Army last week disclosed the proposed visit of President Muhammadu
Buhari to Sambisa forest, Borno State. During the visit which was billed to
take place on Monday, 27th March, 2017, the president was expected to
declare open this year’s Nigerian Army Small Arms Championship.
Although the event has since been held and the president was represented
by a high-ranking Nigerian official, the Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) berates
the way and manner the Nigerian Army made the president’s movement public ahead
of the time in a zone that is yet to become completely secure. That publicity
blitz on the president’s proposed visit to Sambisa was, to say the least, naïve,
infantile and ill-advised.
While
it is true that presidents of countries who dispatched soldiers to war zones
usually visit such dangerous places as the commaders-in-chief of the army, such
visits are usually clandestine for obvious reasons. This explains why US President
Lincoln’s visit to Antietam on October 3, 1862 was unannounced. The same
Lincoln was protected by more than 100 US soldiers when he paid another
surprise visit to Richmond on April 4, 1865.
Neither
British nor American authorities announced Winston Churchill’s rendezvous with Franklin
Roosevelt in Casablanca during World War II in January 1943. On Sunday, 25th
May 2014, former US President Barrack Obama slipped into Afghanistan under
cover of darkness.
So why should Buhari’s visit to Sambisa
be different? This is a notorious Boko Haram stronghold that was held in awe
for years. We cannot afford to underestimate the enemy. Although Boko Haram has
been defeated, bombs are still exploding in Borno State. Villages are still
being attacked. Innocent people are still being killed. That shows how
desperate the insurgents are. We should not play into their hands, at least not
with the life of the president.
MURIC therefore pleads that future
movements of President Muhammadu Buhari and that of senior government officials
around Borno State should be shrouded in secrecy until the remnants of
insurgency have been totally eliminated.
Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC)
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC)
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