Wednesday, 7 May 2014
Either Jonathan goes to Sambisa forest or Shekau remains at Nyanya
BEYOND any thing we’ve ever seen in the past, Nigeria is
today under the siege of terrorist insurgents. We are a
besieged people. The yet unresolved abduction of nearly
250 school girls in Chibok earlier brought home loud hints
of this.
Last Thursday’s attack at Nyanya motor park confirms it
beyond any doubt. With this confirmation the terrorists have
placed two clear choices before President Goodluck
Jonathan: either he accepts their invitation to visit their
hideout in Sambisa forest or risk their permanent presence
at his doorstep in Abuja. This puts the President between a
rock and a hard place if he truly understands the import of
this open challenge to his authority and presidency.
But the choice is his- to respond to this ‘in-your-face’
challenge or go down in history as the worst politician yet
to take up the tenancy of Nigeria’s seat of power.
And if the President thinks he can continue to play the
ostrich, holed up in endless meetings inside the presidential
chamber when he is not on one of his interminable
campaign rallies for 2015, events in the last several days
during which Nigerians across the country and people in
different parts of the world have demanded through street
protests and the social network that the President stop
seating on his hand- the rising calls across the world that
he acts like the leader he is supposed to be, should tell him
that he’s been mistaken all the while he thought he could
drivel his way through the whole abduction fiasco in his
usual manner. Mr. Jonathan must, hopefully, be coming to
the sobering realization that there is more to being
president than flaunting the unimpressive credential of
being the fortuitous candidate of a ‘minority’ group or
gorging oneself on cassava bread.
Three weeks after Goodluck Jonathan sought to clear his
thoughts of the nightmare of the Nyanya bomb blast that
had claimed nearly 100 lives with even higher figures of the
injured; three weeks after he thought he could cut off scenes
of his dance macabre at a Kano campaign rally less than 24
hours after the Nyanya gory attack; indeed three weeks
after the outrage of Chibok, thunder once more struck at the
same place, when bombs shattered the fragile silence of
Nyanya motor park and prematurely sent more Nigerians to
their grave . This happened right under the nose of the
heavily-armed troops which Jonathan as Commander-in-
Chief had sent to secure Nyanya motor park!
We have read of the traffic gridlock created by these troops
in their efforts to keep Abuja safe from terrorist attack.
Nigerians have had first hand experience of travelling in the
direction of Nyanya and Abuja as a whole in the wake of the
terrorist attacks and have unpleasant tales to tell of it all.
The last thing they could have expected is another attack at
the same place that is yet a crime scene under Jonathan’s
ever watchful security personnel. But it happened,
incredible as it might sound, telling us that the terrorists are
set for a showdown with Goodluck Jonathan and the ruling
cohort that have become hostage of their own shadows in
the country’s capital.
While they spurned the direct invitation to Sambisa forest
that the Chibok abduction demanded, the terrorists have
decided to take the battle to the oligarchs of Abuja. They
know what cowardly blather is being spewed at Nigerians
by the braggarts in power and are no longer ready to keep
things on a low key.
Like Elijah and the Prophets of Baal, the terrorists have
issued an open challenge to Jonathan and the battle ground
is Nyanya, not Mount Carmel or any other place Jonathan
may choose to go. Jonathan and his men can not, must not
ignore this challenge.
They must either prove their presence in Nyanya and other
places where the insurgents have taken over or they would
have washed their hands off the safety and security of
Nigerians. I have recently asked in this space if Jonathan
can go to Sambisa forest.
It didn’t look like he was prepared to even though that was
an opportunity to let off his inhibitions about bringing down
fire on the terrorists. Even when Chibok mocked his Janus-
faced approach to fighting terror and made nonsense of his
pacifist rhetoric, Jonathan continued to prove to Nigerians
and the rest of the world that he is a politician incapable of
making hard choices, that he is only fit to attend meetings
where empty threats are issued.
Jonathan might not have given a damn about offering
excuses for the corruption in which his ministerial aides
swim; he may not see any thing worthwhile asking
questions of his footloose ministers who continue to pile up
hundreds of thousands of carbon footprints in extravagant
air travels; the President may surely not see any reason
why he should be expected to be firm against terrorism
when politicians from the region most affected by terror all
but invited it into their home and gave it a large room to
grow.
But he was the one Nigerians made their president, the one
millions through an electoral process, however flawed,
invested with the presidential authority to act on their
behalf. He it was who swore on oath to serve and protect
Nigerians. It is to him Nigerians now turn for answer to the
menace and curse of terrorism. He must do what he swore
to do. It is neither a favour nor something he could choose
to do or not without losing the basis of his present position.
This is his duty, his manifest destiny as the Nigerian
president.
President Jonathan must know that as president he carries
the fate of Nigeria in his hands. He has failed up to this
point to meet the expectations of the people. Like a
confused child he has blundered his way through many
fateful events. He must give up his childish ways and begin
to act like a true parent aware of his responsibility by his
children.
The power he has must be exercised in the service of
Nigerians as a matter of course. He cannot continue in the
same helpless manner he has so far maintained his
presidency like someone beholden to his aides, one who
looks up to them like a child looks up to his parent in
confusion.
The forbidden territories of the Goodluck Jonathan
presidency must be stormed. They must no longer stir fear
in him or make him weak at the knees. Among the previous
disasters of his presidency, Sambisa and Nyanya are
proving the most tricky and dangerous. They are the
immediate elephants in his room of dereliction. He must
either go to Sambisa forest today or cede Nyanya to
terrorists.
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