30th April, 2018
PRESS RELEASE:
CAN PROTEST: WE ARE ALL VICTIMS
The president of the Christian
Association of Nigeria (CAN) on Wednesday, 25th April, 2018, called
on its members across the country to hold demonstrations after church service
on Sunday over killings across the country, especially in the Middle Belt
region. As a result of this call, Christians in Lagos, Akure, Osogbo and
Ado-Ekiti held peaceful protests yesterday (Sunday 29th April, 2018).
The Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) acknowledges the rights
of groups to express themselves in a democratic setting. We also commend the Christian
protesters for conducting themselves peacefully. We affirm clearly, categorically
and unequivocally that life is sacred and no Nigerian citizen, whether
Christian or Muslim, deserves to be killed.
However, we reaffirm
our earlier position that Christians have not been the only victims of the
killings around the country. Muslims are losing hundreds of faithfuls on a
monthly basis in the North East as Boko Haram unleashes terror on the
predominantly Muslim populace. 36 Muslims were killed in Birane Village in Zurmi Local
Council, Zamfara State on February 16, 2018. Six Muslims
were killed in Jidari Polo area of Maiduguri on April 26, 2018.
Even yesterday, Sunday
29th April, 2018, another 15 Muslims were killed in Bawon-Daji
village, in Anka District of Zamfara. Again, more than 12 Muslims were
waylaid and killed in Makurdi, the Benue State capital, when the corpses of the
two priests killed in the Benue church attack were brought to the city. These
are verifiable attacks by those free of the ‘lazymania’ virus.
So the question arises: why kill innocent Muslim
travellers when peaceful protests were already being planned? The pointable
point is that we are all victims. Both Christians and Muslims have lost their
members to criminals and blood-thirsty elements of our country. Meaningful
impact could have been made if both Christians and Muslims held a joint protest
against the failure of government to stem the tide of killings.
That would make it
impossible for observers to read meanings into yesterday’s protest. It would
stop questions like, “Why are they demonstrating now? Is it because Buhari is a
Muslim? Why didn’t they protest when Jonathan was in power? Were there no
killings in Jonathan’s time? Do they want to bring Buhari’s government down?”
Who is doing the
killings? Who are the culprits? Boko Haram insurgents, inflitrators from Libya,
ISIS, local militiamen and certain disgruntled and unpatriotic elements who are
keen on causing instability and discrediting this administration are top on our
list of suspects.
Before we are accused
of academic escapism in a season of ‘lazymania’, a little research will reveal
that no matter how much this administration tries, it cannot overcome all the
security challenges facing the country at the moment, particularly if it
continues to rely on the resources presently at its disposal. Any politician
promising something else is deceiving Nigerians.
The truth of the matter is that Nigeria as at today lacks
the wherewithal to fight insecurity of this dimension. The United Nations
recommends at least one policeman to every 499 persons. Yet with a population
of 193 million people, Nigeria has just 317,000 policemen, about 100,000
soldiers and approximately 33,000 men of the Department of Secret Services
(DSS). This is far below expectation.
It explains why the
army had to deploy thousands of its men from the troubled North East to the
South East when the Biafra debacle erupted about a year ago. Then came crisis
in Plateau State, followed by the herdsmen saga in Taraba and the armed militia
imbroglio in Benue. Zamfara was on fire. Kaduna was burning and the same
military had to draft its men there. It puts the few soldiers we have under
pressure and it also explains why Boko Haram insurgents have not been totally
wiped out. All these crises have caused expensive distractions.
The way forward is for
all patriotic citizens to join hands with the government in its quest for a
peaceful society. Let us allow peace to reign in other parts of the country so
that the military can concentrate on Boko Haram. This is the time for religious
leaders to eschew acrobatic religiousity. It is the time for the citizenry to
abandon gymnastic ethnicity. We must announce a ceasefire across Nigeria and
embrace one another.
Still on the panacea to insecurity in our dear country, MURIC
supports peaceful protests to pressurize government to employ more security
operatives. Si vis pacem para bellum (i.e. if you want peace, prepare for war),
at least an additional 200,000 policemen, 50,000 soldiers and 15,000 men of the
secret police must be recruited in the next few months if the Federal
Government is serious about overcoming the present security challenges. In
addition, sophisticated weapons and modern communication gadgets must be
procured for our security agents so that they can be better prepared to face
the battle ahead.
Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern
(MURIC)
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