THE NIGERIAN GOVERNMENT SINCE 1999: WHAT A GREAT FAN OF MILITANCY AND INSURGENCY!
By Kay Aderibigbe.
The
recent spring of protests that took place in various parts of Nigeria
in October this year showed that the Nigerian people, when pushed to the
wall, are not that docile as being repeatedly painted by the media and
even some NGOs. Lagos state, being the epicenter of the protests
witnessed a ghastly massacre of some youths who were legitimately at the
forefront of the protest. Despite being bunches of spontaneous groups,
the protesters, though, encountered stiff oppositions from both
government-hired thugs and law enforcement agents at different locations
but they remained resilient, organized, resolute, and focused on their
sole purpose of ensuring that Federal government bring those bad eggs in
the police to book and also reform the police force.
Government
did not want the protest in the first place, as such, it became utterly
expedient to secretly buy off the agitators. When all efforts to bribe
the arrowheads of the protests and few notable ones among them proved
abortive the government immediately blocked the bank account that was
being operated with fiat money for the purpose of financing the protest
but the youths forged ahead and prevailed in sourcing finance through
digital currency.
From the viewpoint of the
civil liberty movement or theories of civil disobedience and nonviolent
resistance to political authority, one will realize that the youths
reasonably conducted themselves. Probably this was due albeit, to some
factors such as: the evident 'unity of the elites' despite the
regression of Nigeria as a country, absolute poverty that ravaged the
land, the continuous defense of the police force and crude deception
being perpetrated by its hierarchy; and also, the need to make a
statement by the Nigerian youths that religion or ethnicity could be
sidelined for the purpose of a collective political struggle. The aforementioned reasons could be said to have motivated the psyche of the
protesters.
Initially, police brutality,
impunity and the overbearing influence of police officers over the
common man was identified as the bases for the protest. Instead of the government to reckon with the yearnings of the people, it was the usual
absolute silence that ensued from the government. To add insult to
injury, the police authority also remained adamantly deceptive and
apparently unwilling to sincerely effect changes despite the hue and
cries of the protesters.
Consequently, the
protest got needlessly prolonged and it was eventually hijacked by
hoodlums who took to the streets on the premise that 'if government
forces could kill armless protesters in cold blood then it sounds
justifiable to vandalize police stations and loot private property in
order to get even with an almighty Nigerian government that doesn't seem
bothered by virtually anything'. I became sad and had to posit that .
.."this development on its own is an alarming negative social logic which
requires oriental societal discursive differentiation in order to
positively drill the minds of our people".
The
very crisis that erupted after the Lekki shooting revealed the
volatility of our social formation and the precarity of the Nigerian
state - as it is evident in the porousness of our security architecture,
the depth of poverty, social degradation and above all, the
non-identity of the teeming foot soldiers that could be deployed to
wreak havoc at any time. It is axiomatic that the unrest which followed
the Lekki masacre necessitated the national broadcast reluctantly
delivered by Mr President. One of the psychological implications of such a presidential broadcast on the mentality of an average Nigerian is that
the government doesn't care about or entertain legitimate political
advocacy.
What then is the link between the
cruel quell of the October protest and the future of legitimate advocacy
or civil society/liberty movement in Nigeria?. How does it relate to
insurgency?. Well, a short delve into agitations that turned to militancy between
1999 and now should suffice in this regard.
For
instance, the Niger/Delta militant groups started as peaceful
protesters on the streets of riverine area of Southern Nigeria in the
year 2000; but they were molested, imprisoned and killed until they
metamorphosed to deadly gang of kidnappers and terror-unleashing
armed groups who could snap or cut short the lifeline of the Nigerian economy
at any slight provocation.
The same dreaded
Boko Haram group started as an islamist fundamental social group, until
their leader Muhammed Yusuf, was killed and his farm destroyed by the
government forces in 2009. In fact, the Nigerian government dishonored
ICJ's ruling on compensating Yusuf's family and they also failed to
disintegrate his followers by engaging them through productive
activities.
Groups of disjointed bandits that
are terrorising most parts of Northern Nigeria in the recent time were
once laymen, farmers and herders. But they got frustrated out of failed
secret promises by the political elites who created and used them as
instruments of destabilization. As such, they became monsters and chose
to wield the arms they got from politicians for kidnapping and reckless
killings.
Since 1999, the
Nigerian government has been offering amnesty to militant groups;
talking about cease fire; paying ransom; rehabilitating and promoting
welfare packages for terrorists. All these were even institutionalized
through the establishment of agencies such as the NDDC- Niger Delta
Development Commission, NEDC- North East Development Commission and even
ministries.
It seems that Nigerian government
prefers a situation where the state assumes a 'caretaker role of
terrorists' instead of addressing the reason(s) for which the group
sprouted in the first place. If not so, how come the government makes
use of iron hands against political agitators and eventually turn around
to be welfaristic towards the same agitators when they have already
become public enemies?.
A critical appraisal of
government performance in handling the problem of insurgency since 1999
could lend credence to what has been described by some analysts as 'a systematic encouragement of militancy activities by the government of
Nigeria in order that government officials could make more money through huge
budgetary allocations for insecurity being a national
problem'. A comparison of military rule to the era after 1999 will
substantiate this claim. The military, despite its command nature and
autocratic model of governance still, to a reasonable extent, listened
to civil society groups. Though it wasn't a norm for people to take up
arms against the military during its heyday, it is also a truism that
the military did not in any way encourage militancy or insurgency,
either for political gains or financial rewards.
We have
realized that the Nigerian state in all ramifications is such a typical
example of the Marxian instrument of oppression and a kind of
overarching agency that was put in place in order to ensure the
continuous domination of the society by some notorious selected few. In
fact, the Gaetano Mosca's elitist theory is the best description that
captures the Nigerian political narrative since the return of democracy in1999 because power has resided with a clique of privileged classified few while
majority wallow in abject government-policy-induced penury.
The
very act of suffocating the masses by the government/elites through
re-engineering of the socio-economic systems (social inequality and
oppression) is directly proportional to all public agitations. It then
becomes intrinsic that people ask fundamental questions as to why, what,
when and how would they fare. When the state forcefully gag and hunt
down agitators as it is seen in the case of #ENDSARS promoters hence,
the need to seek options for the sustenance of such political struggle;
which invariably could be pivotal to the transformation of legitimate
advocacy to militancy or insurgency.
An
enigmatic dilemma is in the making in Nigeria but we are not taking it
seriously. Why did I say so? Religion and ethnicity does not matter to
these protesters. They are in fact, acephalous in nature - no leader.
They have a common enemy - bad governance. They speak the same language -
change of situation. They use the same weapon - technology. They have
the same history - things will get better. Their primary aim is not
political power. They are not afraid of death because the economy itself
is killing their morale daily. They don't take bribes. Above all, they
are capable of transmogrifying to an anonymous enemy of a bad government
that can carry out asymmetric warfare in the name of the course they
believe in.
It will be in the best interest of
the country and the political elites to reasonably adjust the blade of the
guillotine they normally use in beheading non-state actors and those
with dissenting thoughts. If the government of Nigeria did not desist
from using force in quelling political advocacy the masses will be
forced to speak in the language the government understands. If the
government, through blatant intolerance and suppression of fundamental human rights eventually creates monsters out of the volatile
hordes of Nigerian youths, then, we should all be ready to witness the
birth of a new pariah state.
The truth is, there is no way the Nigerian army can
cope with a generation of tech-savvy militants that might likely emerge
from the ongoing behavioural class war. Most importantly, we should also bear in mind that every group, either real or imagined, always has some leftists elements!