Frisky Larr (M. A.)
Radio/Television Journalist/Communication Scientist,
Govt. accredited Translator/Interpreter of the English language
Judicially sworn interpreter of English (Regional Court of Bochum)
Germany
Send your email to:
FriskyLarr@aol.com
The secret fear of becoming
politically irrelevant shall not forever hold the nation
completely hostage. European countries will readily come to the
aid of any country at their backyard in Europe faced with the
threat of civil war and destruction to arrest a deteriorating
situation. History has however taught the lesson that they will
readily provide food aid and medical assistants to victims of war
in any African country. But contrary to what they would in their
own backyard, they would seek to improve their own economic growth
by also selling arms to warring parties in Africa and ensure that
wars drag on for as long as possible. Sometimes they add
diplomatic recognitions to their arsenal of war-promoting weapons.
If the Niger Delta militants are
dreaming of any rosy future in separatism, they will definitely
have a sorry story coming their way and only the poor folks will
pay the bills with their precious lives. Enough is enough!
The vicious circle of the
Niger Delta: Shame of a Nation! by Frisky Larr
It started like a child’s
play. It was a struggle in the interest of the suffering masses.
The highlight of the struggle was characterized by environmental
pollution. A serious development that ended up denying the local
folks their erstwhile fertile farming land and healthy fishing
water. The environment was badly polluted by oil drilling business
magnates of multinational identity. The symbol of the struggle in
the days of its holy peak was Ken Saro-Wiwa. The folks rose to
their feet and stood up against the profit hyena of multinational
acclaim. Resources were exploited much to the detriment of the
local folks.
But indiscretion and
misguided political judgment led to the execution of the symbol of
the struggle. He dared the military government of Sani Abacha to
stand up for truth and justice. In the end, the bright and
promising writer with the scholarly gift of literary excellence
Ken Saro-Wiwa was killed against all pleas. He was murdered by
Sani Abacha, who now stands at the center of a regionally
choreographed debate as Nigeria’s best political leader ever.
Unfortunately however, these days were thought to be long gone.
Painful memories were thought to have been soothed in the spirit
of national reconciliation.
But alas, little had
anyone known in the days of Saro-Wiwa’s murder that his struggle
was to open another avenue for a different form of homegrown
terrorism in the guise of justified separatism. For close to seven
years now, Nigeria has been held to ransom by some armed mob and
helpless lunatics of Niger Delta origin. But first, some
fact-checking.
The so-called struggle
for the emancipation of the Niger-Delta is sold internationally
today, as the frantic and last resort to the power of force by the
oppressed and downtrodden masses of the Niger Delta. Many of Ken
Saro-Wiwa’s arguments are being invoked and spread today in the
search for the justice that is so fraudulently and desperately
propagated. The need for the region, on which milk the entire
nation feeds, to be granted a better share of accruing revenue has
been persistently highlighted, not the least, for the improvement
of the lot of the common Niger-Delta masses suffering pathetically
from the impacts of pollution and inequitable revenue allocation.
A lot has also been
done to address the anomaly. Revenue allocation has been
consistently revisited, adjusted and fine-tuned to favor the
region in dramatic hikes. Commissions have been established to
focus on the concerted elevation of the standard of living of a
folk that is not alone in sharing the collective plight of a
nation’s shame. The shame of underdevelopment in the face of
glaring abundance! Numerous public works-projects are on course in
the Niger Delta far more than anywhere else in the country. The
systematic self-service mentality geared towards personal
enrichment away from the universal understanding of the essence of
governance has long been a household tradition of political
leadership in Nigeria. It has excelled in a consistent pace of
steady metamorphosis for the worse throwing Nigeria into darkness
and hunger in the midst of dusty roads and dry taps.
Reasons abound to take
the ruling elite to task. But what is the emancipation of the
Niger Delta all about? Is it a battle to wrest Nigeria from the
hands of a filthy political elite that has long been a national
liability and an obstacle to affluence? If it were, many more
regions would have joined the struggle. Is it a fight to save the
Niger Delta from the rest of the country that has been very well
developed and advanced at the expense of the Niger-Delta that is
still wallowing in poverty? If that were true, many international
voices would have spoken out.
Unfortunately, none of
these is the case. If anything, this movement is the banditry of
cowardice born out of greed and utter disregard for damning
consequences. Observers have long been asking where on earth these
so-called holy emancipators were when Sani Abacha murdered their
son in cold blood? They chickened out in fear from confronting a
military government. Indeed it will be no surprise to understand
that many of the retired senior military personnel training these
bandits today were collaborators of the murderous system.
It all started as a
joke. Politicians sought to make a point and provided finances as
long as the fight was aimed at their opponents. Disgruntled
operatives who felt left out of what they saw as the “kill and
divide” insider practice of the Olusegun Obasanjo administration
financed the acquisition of weapons. Everything was deemed
legitimate that taught Obasanjo a lesson that he was not god. Many
who could have intervened to stop the dangerous insurgency at its
budding stage either kept mute, supported it actively or jubilated
at the sight of Obasanjo been in serious trouble. All these were
being fostered under a civilian experiment that was condemned to
cautious reaction in handling civil strife. It was cowardice
indeed.
No observer has been in
doubt today that a battle of this sort launched against Sani
Abacha’s killing machine would have been blessed with nationwide
support. Today, what started in the collateral impact of
destabilizing a hated government and dressed in the cloak of
seeking justice is threatening to take apocalyptic dimensions away
from the sphere of control of its founding fathers.
In fact, while claiming
to be fighting for and representing the interest of the Niger
Delta, millions of dollars were extorted through the arbitrary
kidnapping of foreigners at the height of anti-Obasanjo
agitations. None of these millions of extorted money ever found
their ways to public work projects in the interest of the Niger
Delta. They were spent on more weapons and shared amongst the big
guns, who grew richer by the day. Indeed Orji Uzor Kalu was more
than cynical and could not disguise a sly grin of malicious
pleasure in a BBC interview while stressing that Olusegun Obasanjo
only didn’t know how to solve the problem of Niger Delta
militancy. Indeed, the pleasure with which he expressed confidence
that he as a President, would have the key to unravel the impasse,
prompted suspicion of his clandestine involvement in fanning the
flame of violence. Today, Orji Uzor Kalu has a friend in Umaru
Musa Yar’Adua doing his best to shield him from corruption-based
prosecution.
A governor in Rivers
State that was not democratically elected and imposed on his folks
by the supreme judges of a supreme court has long taken up the
daring task of getting to the root of the problem in the state
under his governance. Thanks to Governor Rotimi Amaechi’s Truth
and Reconciliation Commission, the nation today, has not only
gained a brief insight into the machinations and mechanisms of
this murderous militancy, it now knows a few names of those who
perpetrated militancy in that part of the nation. A retired
military operative has even been named, who was said to have been
spotted training some militants. Yet no judicial investigation of
any sort has been insinuated by a government wielding the mantra
of the rule of law.
What has changed today
since the exit of Obasanjo and the inauguration of a more
Kalu-friendly regime has been the discontinuation of hostage
taking. Like Obasanjo, talks have been held by the present regime.
Stakeholders have been consulted. Efforts intensified at pacifying
and appeasing emotions in the region.
Unfortunately however,
something always goes wrong. There is always a reason to disagree
with one point or the other. The consequence is a sudden flare-up
of violence, thank God, no longer with hostage taking.
Indeed, there are
simply two possible solutions. An all-out war or the prevalence of
the voice of reason! Since Nigerians are characteristically known
for overdoing every venture embarked upon without the subtle
feeling of identifying the crucial threshold of apocalypses, every
move at appeasement and pacifying the Niger Delta always seems to
be identified as weakness or is it truly weakness? If anything,
the Niger Delta militants are revealing general military
weaknesses in the armed establishment of Nigeria – in the navy and
ground forces.
In the aftermath of Odi
and Zaki-Biam, Obasanjo was careful to avoid a blanket onslaught.
In the exaggerated self-estimation of the militants and their
backers, they seem to forget that an all-out war with the navy,
air force and ground forces set out against them to resolve this
issue once and for all will only end up in a carnage of sort and
the destruction of innocent civilians in whose names the militants
claim to operate. It is certain that Nigeria has passed the stage
of separatism and disintegration. If these daydreaming agitators
of separatism knew what they were up against, no doubt they would
better be advised to revisit Biafra of the 1970s to comprehend the
enormity of public hardship and wastage in lives and resources
that will accompany a senseless civil war. They should have known
by now that the notion of a sovereign Niger Delta nation will
never be an issue for any roundtable or squared-table discussion
by any political instance as long as Nigeria lives.
Unfortunately however,
the longer an all-out war is ruled out, the stronger the militants
may get with time and thus become even more audacious. It may be
apocalyptic if one day, an airport or a place of public gathering
becomes the target of this mob-gone-wild. In other words, while
every further audacious strike by the militants on oil
installations may heighten the pressure on government to narrow
down the day of reckoning for an all-out war, this reality alone
should be pressure enough on the militants and their sponsors to
understand that they will not forever enjoy this obnoxious
jester’s license ad infinitum.
The secret fear of
becoming politically irrelevant shall not forever hold the nation
completely hostage. European countries will readily come to the
aid of any country at their backyard in Europe faced with the
threat of civil war and destruction to arrest a deteriorating
situation. History has however taught the lesson that they will
readily provide food aid and medical assistants to victims of war
in any African country. But contrary to what they would in their
own backyard, they would seek to improve their own economic growth
by also selling arms to warring parties in Africa and ensure that
wars drag on for as long as possible. Sometimes they add
diplomatic recognitions to their arsenal of war-promoting weapons.
If the Niger Delta militants are dreaming of any rosy future in
separatism, they will definitely have a sorry story coming their
way and only the poor folks will pay the bills with their precious
lives. Enough is enough!