The Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of
Justice, Abubakar Malami (SAN), says the Federal Government is yet to
officially designate bandits as terrorists because the government is following
international best practices.
He said his office was in the process of gazetting a court
judgement that ordered the government to declare bandits as terrorists, adding
that the process would be concluded in a matter of days.
Malami spoke on Tuesday as a guest on NTA Good Morning
Nigeria Show.
States in the North-West geopolitical zone including Zamfara,
Katsina, Sokoto and Kaduna have been ravaged with banditry in the last year.
The nefarious activities of the marauders have also spilt into the North
Central and other zones in the country. The bandits have killed hundreds of
innocent persons, kidnapped several others including schoolchildren, with some
still in their custody, while some are nursing injuries sustained during the
attacks.
There has been clamour by many Nigerians including
socio-political groups that bandits should be declared as terrorists like the
bloodthirsty Boko Haram insurgent group.
Justice Taiwo Taiwo of the Federal High Court in Abuja on
November 26, 2021, had granted an ex parte application by the Federal
Government for Yan Bindiga (Hausa word for gunmen) and Yan Ta’adda (Hausa word
for terrorists) to be declared as terrorists but the regime of the President, Muhammadu Buhari, has not done so over a month after.
Whereas in the case of the Indigenous People of Biafra,
Malami was able to gazette the designation of IPOB as terrorists on the same
day that Justice Abdu Kafarati gave the order on September 20, 2017.
Speaking on Tuesday, Malami said the government acted
swiftly in declaring IPOB and Boko Haram as terror groups because of the
“threats to lives and properties they have caused in the nation.”
He said, “Government has a responsibility to act but within
the context of acting, you equally expected to operate within the confines of
international best practices associated with engagement and one of such best
practices is that you can only use maximum force on groups, individuals that
are declared terrorists and that is where the application of the Terrorism Act comes
in place.
“With that in mind, Nigeria acted, first by proscribing
IPOB, taking into consideration the threats to lives and properties they have
caused in the nation. Boko Haram was proscribed.”
The AGF noted that the “good results” arising from outlawing
IPOB and Boko Haram buoyed the government to consider the proscription of
bandits, and the use of military hardware against the marauders.
He said, “Now, we are confronted with another threat in the
North-West associated with banditry, kidnapping, cattle rustling and in all
these, these people are using weapons to attack Nigerians, kidnap them and
created a situation of serious security challenge and fear in the system.
“Whatever military hardware you acquire there are limits
within the context of the international convention as to how it can be used,
when it can be used and against who it can be used. And that is how the idea of
looking at the activities of the bandits, cattle rustlers, kidnappers come into
being.
“Our assessment taking into consideration that they are
causing a major threat to the territorial peaceful co-existence and causing a
major threat to lives with weapons, the idea then came about that indeed they
(bandits) have satisfied the criteria of being declared terrorists within the
context of the law so that whatever military hardware at the disposal of the
Federal Government can best be used against them within the context of the
international convention and within the context of the law.”
On why his office has not gazetted the court order
designating bandits as terrorists, the senior advocate said, “The gazetting of
a court order or judgement is a process but what matters fundamentally within
the context of international convention is the judicial declaration and that
has been obtained; the court has declared bandits, kidnappers, cattle rustlers
as terrorists.
“So, with or without the gazette, what gives effect to such
declaration is a judicial pronouncement but the gazette is a mere formality and
it has been on and I believe within a matter of days, it will be concluded.”
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