amnesty

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The Nigerian Way by Roselyn Sho-Olajide.

  INTRODUCTION I was privileged to visit an Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) Camp located in Jos, Plateau State, sometime last year, and what I saw was better imagined than experienced. The people living in the IPD camps were in dire straits, and one could not help, but pity them. A few days later, I watched on TV with a dropped jaw how some repentant insurgents were dressed in white clothes and green caps and given VIP treatment. The same men were granted amnesty and were to undergo rehabilitation, would then be freed to lead lives as if they had never committed atrocious crimes before. WHAT IS AMNESTY? According to Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English (Sixth Edition), amnesty is an official order by a government that allows a particular group of prisoners to go free. Another definition by the same source is that amnesty is a period of time when you can admit to doing something illegal without being punished. We have heard of amnesty in Nigeria as far back as 2011 when the Federal Government of Nigeria granted amnesty to the Niger Delta Militants. But this piece is centered on the current amnesty programme proposed by the Federal Government to be granted to repentant bandits and insurgents.   INSURGENTS/BANDITS VS THEIR VICTIMS  Reports have it that there are over two million people that have been displaced in Borno State alone. When we add the number in other states, we would have a mind-boggling number of people that have been made to flee their homes because of the activities of insurgents and bandits. These people have been displaced from their homes and are camped in IDPs Camps where there is a shortage of water and food, and no means of livelihood. The above staggering figure is growing as the days go by, and you shouldn’t be shocked to learn that we currently have millions of IDPs in the country. This is as a result of the growing violence in some parts of the country, most especially the northeastern and some parts of the north central regions. These innocent citizens of this great nation have been made IDPs as a result of the heinous activities of insurgents and bandits. They are going through these afflictions not because of any crime they have committed, but because of something they had no control over whatsoever. Operation Safe Corridor, a multi-agency humanitarian effort was launched by the Federal Government in 2016 as an amnesty for insurgents and bandits aimed at De-radicalisation, Rehabilitation, and Re-Integration (DRR) of former members of the same insurgents that have unleashed nothing, but terror and had made life unendurable for the people  for over 10 years. It is expected that the same group of people should be assimilated back into the society they had tried to destroy.   As of July 2020, 881 repentant former terrorists have been released since the launch of the programme. So far, Millions of Naira have been used to rehabilitate the same set of people that are responsible for truncating the lives of thousands of people and have displaced millions of people. They have done nothing but maimed, raped, and destroyed innocent lives and properties. It is sad to note that the Federal Government is enabling the culprits to the detriment of millions of their innocent victims. DO INSURGENTS AND BANDITS DESERVE AMNESTY? Before the country grants these groups of people amnesty, there are questions we need to address. Questions like: How are their victims expected to feel when they see people that have made life unbearable being celebrated? Will giving them amnesty change the fact that they have committed heinous crimes against humanity? What does the country stands to gain in granting amnesty to the same people who have thrown the country into jeopardy? Can the repentant insurgents lead normal lives without relapsing to crimes? Do we now celebrate crime to the detriment of the lives of innocent people? Will the amnesty bring an end to insurgency and banditry in Nigeria? Isn’t it an irony that graduates earn thirty thousand Naira as stipends under the NPower programme while insurgents and bandits get more? CONCLUSION  Currently, a bill is being sponsored by the immediate past governor of Yobe State, Ibrahim Gaidam, who is now the Senator representing Yobe East Senatorial District in the National Assembly. The bill which has already scaled through the first reading is proposing that insurgents should be made beneficiaries of Presidential Amnesty just like the Niger Delta Militants. The bill also seeks to give immediate backing for repentant insurgents to be integrated back into society. Instead of spending so much money to rehabilitate bandits and insurgents, the Federal Government should channel the same finances towards upgrading the lives of IDPs. These are people that are suffering not for any offence, but for the fact that the system has failed them completely. Their lives and sources of livelihoods have been crushed under the wheels of insecurities and the failure of those who have sworn to protect them. Another thing is for the government to channel the funds into creating more jobs for the youths. It’s usually frustrating when one graduates and stays for years without a job. This makes the graduate prone to joining social vices like insurgents and banditry. Why are we surprised that banditry and insurgence are escalating in Nigeria? The government is making it look like it pays more to be a criminal than to be an honest person in the country. Insurgents and bandits should be made to pay for their crimes and not be granted amnesty. I look at all these and do not have an option, but call it the Nigerian way.    Reference:https://www.pulse.ng/news/local/boko-haram-senate-disagrees-with-buhari-on-amnesty/q90lk91 Roselyn Sho – Olajide works with an Audit Firm in Jos, Plateau State. She loves reading and writing and can be reached via quest4yln@gmail.com  

Blog, Essays, Monishots

Amnesty Or The Gallows For Boko Haram?

  “Reconciliation does not mean forgetting or trying to bury the pain of conflict, but that reconciliation means working together to correct the legacy of past injustice.” ~ Nelson Mandela It would appear that Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe’s controversial call on President Buhari to resign hit the bullseye. I had opined in my last article that the Abia Senator indirectly told the North to wake up as the rest of the country seems to have finally lost its patience with the region’s seeming anathema for progress even after dominating the country’s leadership for many decades. Subsequently, notable northern leaders are speaking out. The Emir of Kano, Alhaji Sanusi Lamido reiterated his position on sanitising the Almajiri system, stating that Islam prohibits begging and that those who claim otherwise are misleading the people. Governor Zulum of Borno state publicly blamed the military for the Auno attack and in a subsequent sympathy visit the President pointedly told traditional rulers that Boko Haram attacks could only be possible if the people allow it. We were also treated to a memo from the NSA effectively heaping allegations of subversion and insubordination against the president’s Chief of Staff. But perhaps the most controversial issue currently on our table is the proposed bill to rehabilitate Boko Haram terrorists. The bill titled: “National Agency for the Education, Rehabilitation, De-radicalisation and Integration of repentant insurgents in Nigeria”, is sponsored by Senator Ibrahim Gaidam of Yobe East and has passed the first reading in the upper chamber. While we cannot comprehensively dissect the components of the bill as its details still remain sketchy, we can at least peruse the political memory lane to interrogate its potential merits and demerits to determine if it should be rejected totally or redesigned according to the peculiarity of the situation. Let us recollect that this is not entirely new. The suggestion of an amnesty for Boko Haram was first made by Alhaji Saad Abubakar. The Sultan of Sokoto at the 2013 annual meeting of the Jama’atul Nasril Islam (JNI) had called on President Jonathan to “declare amnesty to all combatants without thinking twice”. The government then set up a committee which explored the feasibility of an amnesty deal. Unfortunately, the Jihadist group outrightly rejected any chance of making peace with the government. Nevertheless, some programs on deradicalisation, rehabilitation and reintegration have been undertaken in bits and pieces by NGOs in collaboration with the government. Three prominent programmes include a deradicalisation centre located in Kuje prison, Abuja which was created by the Jonathan administration in 2014. Operation Safe Corridor launched by the current government in 2016 and the Yellow Ribbon Initiative set up in 2017 by Neem Foundation, an NGO embedded in some affected communities in Borno state. The concept of amnesty is equally not a new phenomenon in Nigeria. The Yar’Adua government had offered the same to MEND militants who unleashed terror in the creeks to demand resource control as a panacea to the rising poverty and environmental degradation in the Niger Delta. Before you crucify me for including Niger Delta militants in the same essay with Boko Haram kindly permit me to reboot your anamnesis with a few lines. Sometime in March 2009, militants from Tompolo’s dreaded Camp Five in Gbaramatu Kingdom ambushed a JTF patrol in the creeks and reportedly KILLED 13 soldiers. A number of foreigners were also kidnapped and several vessels destroyed in that operation. When President Yar’Adua began consultations for his proposed amnesty to end the Niger Delta crisis he held several informal meetings with militant leaders in the Villa and some of their demands included the release of CAPTURED militants being detained in connection with the killing of JTF troops. The President acquiesced, and consequently “the military was directed to free several militants and their supporters who were in their custody”- Adeniyi Power, Politics And Death p. 83. Yar’Adua would later announce his amnesty deal and in July 2009 a budget of between N52–68 billion was set aside for the REHABILITATION of over 20,000 REPENTANT militants. They became pampered ‘govt pikins’ undergoing training, rehabilitation and reintegration over a period of 42 months in government-designated residential training centres at home and abroad. They were flown to and fro Abuja, chauffered around in official government vehicles, fed and accommodated in luxury hotels at taxpayers’ expense. Some ex-militants received monthly allowances of N65,000 over that period. An amount that tripled the average salary of a rookie civil servant and also higher than that of a recruit in the military. I have elucidated the foregoing points with some emphasis to elicit a vivid evocation for those may be quick to slate any analogy between the two scenarios by offering the naive argument that the Boko Haram insurgency is entirely different from the Niger Delta militancy. Of course, the ideology, motive and modus operandi of both groups differ greatly. However, terrorism has varying forms including economic terrorism and if we agree on the textbook definition of the word then we can also agree that one man’s terrorist is another man’s freedom fighter. So ditching the semantics leaves us with two similarities. One, both groups have taken up arms against the Nigerian state in pursuit of their objectives. And two, both have killed Nigerians. However, the opposition against the current proposal has been much louder than the support for it. That is assuming it has any beyond Senator Gaidam. This is quite understandable because no group has caused more damage to this country than Boko Haram since the 1914 amalgamation. Senator Ali Ndume, a prominent lawmaker from the northeast who was once arrested for links to Boko Haram is leading the naysayers. He is of the opinion that the bill will only encourage the insurgents as “it is when you win the war and some people surrender that you think about something like that,”. While Senator Istifanus Gyang from Plateau North urged his colleagues to reject the bill on the basis that it will be rewarding the criminals instead of rehabilitating the victim communities displaced by their criminality. But

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