How my administration will tackle Boko Haram – Buhari

President-elect Gen. Buhari in an opinion article published on New York Times yesterday April 14th, wrote on how his administration will tackle the terror group, Boko Haram. Read below…

When Boko Haram attacked a school in the
town of Chibok, in northeastern Nigeria, kidnapping more than 200 girls,
on the night of April 14, 2014, the people of my country were aghast.
Across the world, millions of people joined them in asking: How was it
possible for this terrorist group to act with such impunity? It took
nearly two weeks before the government even commented on the crime.
This lack of reaction was symptomatic of why the administration of
President Jonathan was swept aside last month – the first time an
incumbent president has been successfully voted out of office in the
history of our nation.

For too long they ruled, not governed, and in doing so had become so
focused on their own self-interest and embroiled in corruption that the
duty to react to the anguish suffered by their citizens had become
alien to them. My administration, which will take office on May 29,
will act differently – indeed it is the very reason we have been
elected. This must begin with honesty as to whether the Chibok girls can
be rescued.

Currently their whereabouts remain unknown. We do not know the state
of their health or welfare, or whether they are even still together or
alive. As much as I wish to, I cannot promise that we can find them: to
do so would be to offer unfounded hope, only to compound the grief if,
later, we find we cannot match such expectation. But I say to every
parent, family member and friend of the children that my government will
do everything in its power to bring them home.

What I can pledge, with absolute certainty, is that from the first
day of my administration, Boko Haram will know the strength of our
collective will and commitment to rid this nation of terror, and bring
back peace and normalcy to all the affected areas. Until now, Nigeria
has been wanting in its response to their threat: With our neighbours
fighting hard to push the terrorists south and out of their countries,
our military was not sufficiently supported or equipped to push north.
As a consequence, the outgoing government’s lack of determination was an
accidental enabler of the group, allowing them to operate with impunity
in Nigerian territory.

That is why the answer to defeating Boko Haram begins and ends with
Nigeria. That is not to say that allies cannot help us. My
administration would welcome the resumption of a military training
agreement with the United States, which was halted during the previous
administration. We must, of course, have better coordination with the
military campaigns our African allies, like Chad and Niger, are waging
in the struggle against Boko Haram. But, in the end, the answer to this
threat must come from within Nigeria. We must start by deploying more
troops to the front and away from civilian areas in central and southern
Nigeria where for too long they have been used by successive
governments to quell dissent.

We must work closer with our neighbors in coordinating our military
efforts so an offensive by one army does not see their country’s lands
rid of Boko Haram only to push it across the border onto their
neighbors’ territory. But as our military pushes Boko Haram back, as it
will, we must be ready to focus on what else must be done to counter
the terrorists. We must address why it is that young people join Boko
Haram. There are many reasons why vulnerable young people join militant
groups, but among them are poverty and ignorance.

Indeed Boko Haram – which translates in English, roughly, as
“Western Education Is Sinful” – preys on the perverted belief that the
opportunities that education brings are sinful. Promise of food If you
are starving and young, and in search of answers as to why your life is
so difficult, fundamentalism can be alluring. We know this for a fact
because former members of Boko Haram have admitted it: They offer
impressionable young people money and the promise of food, while the
group’s mentors twist their minds with fanaticism. So we must be ready
to offer the parts of our country affected by this group an alternative.

Boosting education will be a direct counterbalance to Boko Haram’s
appeal. In particular we must educate more young girls, ensuring they
will grow up to be empowered through learning to play their full part as
citizens of Nigeria and pull themselves up and out of poverty. Indeed,
we owe it to the schoolgirls of Chibok to provide as best an education
as possible for their fellow young citizens. Boko Haram feeds off
despair. It feeds off a lack of hope that things can improve.

By attacking a site of learning, and kidnapping more than 200
schoolgirls, it sought to strike at the very place where hope for the
future is nurtured, and the promise of a better Nigeria. It is our
intention to show Boko Haram that it will not succeed. My government
will first act to defeat it militarily and then ensure that we provide
the very education it despises to help our people help themselves. Boko
Haram will soon learn that, as Nelson Mandela said, “Education is the
most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world.”

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