The statement made last week by Alhaji
Mujahid Asari-Dokubo, leader of the Niger Delta People’s Volunteer
Force, that President Goodluck Jonathan must be allowed to do a second
term in 2015 or there would be no peace in Nigeria has generated a lot
of dust, with Governor Babangida Aliyu of Niger State asking for his
arrest for treason, while the House of Representatives asked that he be
investigated by the security agencies.
Not done yet, Asari-Dokubo responded the
next day by daring anyone to arrest him and risk the dire consequences
of the disintegration of Nigeria. Ordinarily, an individual would not
dare make such a statement for fear of the consequences. But Nigeria has
become an unusual country, where unusual things happen.
Opinion has been divided over whether he
should be arrested for his inflammatory and inciting statement,
compounded by his arrogant challenge to the nation. Like everything
Nigerian, the issue has become a divisive issue of North versus South
and Jonathan’s sympathisers versus Jonathan’s detractors.
But it is good to look at a few similar
acts and how they were resolved so as to better know how to approach
Asari-Dokubo’s claims. In 1994, based on the annulled June 12, 1993
election results, which showed that he was the winner, Chief M.K.O.
Abiola declared himself the President of Nigeria at Epetedo, Lagos. He
disappeared after that announcement, but was arrested immediately he
reappeared. He never returned to his home alive. Abiola died
mysteriously in detention on July 7, 1998, at a time most people were
hopeful that he would breathe the air of freedom and a solution found to
the mindless annulment of an election that was free by all standards.
On November 10, 1995, writer and
environmentalist, Mr. Ken Saro-Wiwa, who was leader of the Movement for
the Survival of the Ogoni People, MOSOP, was hanged. Saro-Wiwa, with
some of his kinsmen, was accused of inciting the people to kill some of
their kinsmen who were seen as sabotaging their cause by supporting the
government.
Two major factors made the arrest and
death of Abiola and Saro-Wiwa easier: One, an iron-fisted military
dictatorship was in power. Two, both men led non-violent campaigns –
they had no militias.
Another man has faced a similar fate but
is lucky to be alive: Chief Ralph Uwazuruike, the leader of the
Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra. Because
his campaign has also been non-violent, he has been arrested a couple
of times, detained and charged for treason. But he is lucky to have
started his campaign after the end of military dictatorship.
Soon after the military withdrew from
power in 1999 the O’odua People’s Congress, which broke into two
factions, became a terror in the South-West. As well as bloody
confrontations between the two factions, there were crises in which, the
Hausas, Igbos, and police officers especially, were targeted and
killed. For example, speaking on the British Broadcasting Corporation’s
Network Africa on September 10, 1999 over the OPC’s involvement in the
crisis that claimed many lives at the Nigerian ports, Apapa, Lagos, the
factional leader of the group, Dr Frederick Fasehun, acknowledged that
the OPC participated in the crisis, in his word, to “solidarise” with
their Yoruba kinsmen who were being marginalised at the ports. He argued
that the seaports were in Yoruba land, and so the Yoruba should rightly
dominate them. Many people were shocked at that ugly turn of events
from the Yoruba ethnic group, who were hitherto seen as fighters for
justice. Human rights lawyer and crusader, Chief Gani Fawehinmi (SAN),
was so appalled by the orgies of violence against non-Yoruba that he
announced that he had severed all links with the OPC and would no longer
defend the group in court. In all this bloodletting and incitement,
Fasehun was never arrested, neither was Chief Gani Adams, the leader of a
break-away faction of the OPC.
A few years after President Olusegun
Obasanjo was sworn in on May 29, 1999, the Niger Delta became restive.
Oil facilities were bombed. Foreign oil workers were kidnapped. Many
security men were killed. Nigeria’s oil export plummeted. The security
operatives tried to contain the violence but achieved little result.
Obasanjo decided to change tactics: He used a presidential jet to fly
Asari-Dokubo to Abuja for talks. After the talks, the violence
continued. Then the Obasanjo government arrested him and charged him for
treason. The situation seemed to worsen. He was in detention until
President Umaru Yar’Adua took over, and released him on June 14, 2007.
Yar’Adua later introduced the Amnesty Programme, in which the Niger
Delta militants were asked to renounce violence, hand in their weapons
and be pardoned as well as having themselves and their communities taken
care of by the government. With that, peace returned to the
oil-producing Niger Delta.
On October 3, 2010, a former Kaduna
State governor, Alhaji Lawan Kaita, was quoted as saying: “Anything
short of a Northern president is tantamount to stealing our
presidency…The North is determined, if that happens, to make the country
ungovernable for President Jonathan or any other Southerner who finds
his way to the seat of power on the platform of the PDP against the
principle of the party’s zoning policy.”
On December 15, 2010, while the campaign
for the presidential ticket of the PDP was at its peak, former
Vice-President Atiku Abubakar said in reference to Jonathan’s decision
to contest the primaries in spite of claims that there was an agreement
in the PDP for power to rotate between the North and the South: “Let me
again send another message to the leadership of our great country,
especially the political leadership, that those who make peaceful change
impossible make violent change inevitable.”
It was seen as an inciting statement.
But Abubakar was never arrested. The government knew that arresting him
at that time would have been interpreted as suppression of the
opposition. In addition to his status as a former vice-president, the
fact that Jonathan is from the South, while Abubakar is from the North,
at a time the North felt aggrieved over the loss of the Presidency, made
that option fraught with danger.
Again, in March last year, Lawan Kaita
was quoted as saying: “We hear rumours all over that Jonathan is
planning to contest in 2015. Well, the North is going to be prepared if
the country remains one. That is, if the country remains one, we are
going to fight for it. If not, everybody can go his way.”
None of these men was arrested or even
questioned for treason or incitement, despite that there have been
killings, which some have linked to such utterances. Also truly, the
nation has been made ungovernable since after the 2011 elections.
During Obasanjo’s tenure, a state of
emergency was declared in Plateau State on May 18, 2004 and Ekiti State
on October 19, 2006 for crises that were not as grave and grievous as
insecurity, lawlessness and impunity that have been the lot of many
Northern states, especially Borno, Yobe, Bauchi, and Kano since 2010.
But again probably because of fear of being seen as victimising the
North, the Jonathan administration has continued to avoid taking that
decision.
Even though Asari-Dokubo’s comments left
a sour taste in the mouth, the question is: If it is true that what is
sauce for the goose is also sauce for the gander, on what basis or moral
grounds should he then be arrested? It is apparent Asari-Dokubo was
emboldened by the fact that those who made similar statements in the
past were treated like the untouchables. The nation must not
allow itself to be cowed into allowing people go away with treasonable
statements and actions for whatever reason. Just like Chinua Achebe
said: “It is the fear of causing offence that makes men swallow poison.”
We have failed to face the bitter truth
that in the past 14 years, our country has been degenerating into
impunity. Might has become right. Some people have become above the law
either because of their status, their ethnic group, religion, or the
amount of violence they and their supporters are capable of unleashing
on the nation. Security officers are killed in their numbers with wild
abandon: from Bayelsa State to Kano State, to Borno State and Nasarawa
State. Kidnappers terrorise the South-East, South-South, South-West, and
even the North. No week passes without the Boko Haram bombing one town
in the North.
Ordinarily, for the state to keep every
other group and individual under its authority, it should have the upper
hand in matters of force of arms. But different groups have realised
that if they can prove that they have the capacity to wreak more havoc
on the land than the security agencies can contain, they will be offered
amnesty rather than punishment. And so, more groups have embraced this
method.
A state starts to fail if groups within
it have more capacity to cause harm than the state can contain. Nigeria
must pull itself from this path fast, or the consequences may be grave.
(Punch)
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The point still remains that if all the others that made such statements in the past where consistently arrested then Asari should be. To arrest only him would be showing bias. Besides he boldly spoke the truth. Why shoot the messenger and ignore the message?
ReplyDeleteAnd what truth are you referring to here? Why not keep your rotten mouth shut if you've got nothing sensible to say! Who among all those listed above dared the security agents to arrest him if they can? Only the big fool Asari of course! He called them cowards if they couldn't arrest him. And that's exactly what they are - cowards! No wonder they can't even protect themselves let alone ordinary civilians! By now, this Asari or whatever he's called, should be in the dungeon! I can't just imagine a single person daring the whole nation. What I will want us all to know is that, the boast of Asari is a big slap on the President's face. He's simply saying he's greater than the President. Jonathan is the President of this great nation and the Chief Security Officer & by virtue of that position, he was supposed to have called for his immediate arrest & prosecution!
DeleteDo u need arest 2 rest a mad dead man ' 4gt him...
ReplyDeleteAsari-Dokubo MUST NOT BE ARRESTED. We are a joker in this country. When the Northerners were making excessive statement nobody checked nor arrested them. Why then shoud anybody consider arresting Asari-Dokubo for mere saying the truth. The Northerners should be very care beside they are the one who has been clamouring for the division of this country. I wish we go back to the REGIONAL GOVERNMENT as in the past if this is the only way there could be peace in Nigeria.
ReplyDeleteArrest Asari marks the beginning of the. Much awaited civil. War
ReplyDeletei do not see any reason to arrest him , he just expressed his views
ReplyDeleteWhich Government will arrest him? Is it Jonathan Government which he is campaigning for? This is definately hand of Esau and voice of Jacob. Let us pray that this country will not disintegrated before 2015.
ReplyDeleteHahahaha Lol Am watching and waiting hahahahahahaaha Lol Well to me Asari Made emphasis which to me is a weak up call to whoever that listing to him to think wisely and understand why he also made his own statement, He said some other people made a similar statement in the time past but was not and never arrested, That if you wan to arrest him , you must 1st of all arrest the people that made that same statement 1st. Is simple my dear brother. Asari said his based on other people's comment. That's All
ReplyDeleteHe knows Jonathan is clueless and weak dai is why.......
ReplyDeleteI wish the Northerners must not continue to remain a bagger in Nigeria anylonger they should chat a new means of survival rather than terrorising the SS and GEJ. Asari Dokubu is right and there is truth in his statement, why not call a spade, a spade. If we forgot the past let start with the present by arresting Fommer Gov. of Kano- Kaita, follow by Babangida, and the latest Buhari that is currently hiving the BH that cause insecurity in Nigeria.
ReplyDeleteSince some Northerns made the same statement and they were not arrested, why should Asari Dokubo be arrested. They should arrest all the Northerns that made the same statement first, then Asari Dokubo's arrest will be justified. Why does the North think they should be president after ruling the country for many years? what do they contribute to the economy of the country? They are all parasites!!!
ReplyDeleteAsari is saying the truth- allah bless you, we all support ur statement. Tell our brothers in Nothern that Mohammed preach and embrassed peace. They should love the South South b/cos from there our daily bread come from and stop mis-trust, Injustices and incisant Killing of Southerners in the North.
ReplyDeleteWhy arrest Asari while the pepetrators of violent change have field day fulfilling their own comments.
ReplyDeleteYou can see that the narrator even omitted one or two more persons who had made similar threats! What of Buhari? What of fasakuen who dared Jonathan to order for the arrest of Buhari and see hell? You people are cowards who seemed to dread the North! They are not the only tribe in Nigeria. Any Nigerian making inciting statements, should be arrested and prosecuted, irrespective of who he or she is, or where he/she comes from.
ReplyDeleteWhy are we so naive about the outcome of Nigeria as we know it today. The Northern people want to go separate way,so that they can institute their form of islamic rule and the south is ready for separation as well. Can we just go ahead form a national conference to cut our loses and separate. The next election should have a referendum on splitting the country into Northern Nigeria and Southern Nigeria. I'm afraid that unneccessary waste of lives will happen if we fail to proactively go peacefully.
ReplyDeleteOur northern brothers do believe that they are entitled to ruling and if or when Jonathan runs for relection there will definetely be WAR between the north and the south. We should not allow this to happen because innocent lives will be lost.
This marriage is over and its time to get a peaceful divorce.
Haaaaaaahaaaaaaaaa.Lets wait for 2015. The polity is so heated up.Hausa, Yoruba, Niger Delta. What about the East.The Ibo man nobody thinks about them, they dont make noise any longer, they are just watching the clock tic tac, waiting for the appointed time.Just as it happened to them in Egypt, pharoah accepted that they go, so will it happen again here in Nigeria. The Hebrews, I meam Hibo no no Ibo yes will be let to go. And you will will see the greatest civilization in the whole of Africa
ReplyDelete