Given the unfolding events in our country I believe that
this is the time for deep introspection and sobre reflection.
I am not a member of IPOB, I have never attended any IPOB
meeting and neither am I Igbo. I am however deeply concerned about what is going
on in our country, what the Igbos are being subjected to and what I consider to
be the greatest assault on the human rights and civil liberties of the Nigerian
people since the military left power in 1999.
A violation of the constitutional right of freedom of
association and freedom of speech affects not just those that have been
targetted but each and every one of us.
An act of injustice against one is an act of injustice
against all. What affects the part also affects the whole. If you beat my
neighbours child it is as good as beating mine and consequently I have a duty
to defend that child.
That is the essence of humanity and chivalry: to speak up
for those that are being persecuted, to defend the defenceless, to fight for
those that are too weak to fight for themselves and to be the voice of the
voiceless.
We must cultivate the discipline and courage to defend the
right of others to be different and to think differently from us and to express
contrary views.
We may not all agree with the style, language and objectives
of IPOB but we surely have a duty before God and the law to defend, uphold and
affirm their right to express themselves in any way that they deem fit
providing they do not threaten or hurt others whilst doing so.
This is the very essence, foundation and indeed cornerstone
of freedom and democracy and if we allow the government to take that away from
us and to get away with what they are doing without a stiff challenge we are
finished as a people.
It is IPOB today but tomorrow it could be OPC, Ijaw Youth
Council, Ohaneze, Afenifere, Middle Belt Forum, Arewa Youths, Arewa
Consultative Forum, Northern Elders Forum or indeed anyone else.
I have never heard of a “terrorist” organisation that has
not killed or threatened to kill anyone and that has totally rejected the idea
of violence and an armed struggle.
I have never heard of a “terrorist” organisation whose only
aspiration is to have a referendum to determine whether or not their people
should or should not remain in Nigeria.
I have never heard of a “terrorist” organisation whose only
objective is the peaceful and lawful exercise of the right of
self-determination.
I have never heard of a “terrorist” organisation whose only
crime is to take objection to the stripping away of their historical and
cultural identity and to speak out against the willful marginalisation and mass
murder of their people.
I have never heard of a “terrorist” organisation who believe
in passive and non-violent resistance and who consistently emphasise the
importance of peaceful opposition.
Saying that IPOB is a terrorist organisation is like saying
that Mother Theresa is the Marquis De Sade. It is like saying that an angel
from heaven is a demon from hell. It is like saying that Little Red Riding Hood
is the hungry and ravenous wolf.
It is like saying that Snowhite is Jack the Ripper. It is
like saying that Florence Nightingale is Aleister Crowley. It is like saying
that the Apostle Paul is Anton La Vey.
It is like saying that John the Baptist is Atilla the Hun.
It is like saying that Desmond Tutu is Ghengis Khan. It is like saying that
John Knox is Adolf Hitler.
It is like saying that Martin Luther King is Osama Bin
Ladin. It is like saying that Nelson Mandela is Ali Al Baghdadi. It is like
saying that Mahatma Ghandi is Abubakar Shekau.
It is like saying that Amnesty International are the Fulani
Herdsmen. It is like saying that Medecine Sans Frontier is Boko Haram. It is
like saying that Human Rights Watch is ISIS.
It is like saying that the white dove of love and peace is
the savage, cruel, blood-crazed and cadavar-eating vulture from the seventh
circle of hell.
It is like saying that ice is fire. It is like saying that a
believer is an infidel. It is like saying that a peaceful preacher is a violent
blasphemer.
Such a designation and categorisation is unhelpful,
inappropiate and unfair. It is a damning and specious lie that has been put out
by a Federal Government that is paranoid, weak, bereft of ideas and scared of
it’s own shadow.
It is a desperate attempt to give a dog a bad name in order
to hang it. It is childish nonsense and it does not make sense.
Finally came the most absurd allegation of all: that IPOB is
being funded by “treasury looters”, “disgruntled” and “destabilising” elements
“in the opposition” and by France.
Some assertions are so insane and asinine that they ought
not to be dignified with a response and this is one of them.
I urge IPOB to go to court and have the order that has
designated them as a terrorist organisation set aside.
I also urge President Muhammadu Buhari and his Minister of
Information, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, to remember that when they exercised their
right of freedom of speech three years ago and openly defended Boko Haram by
saying respectively that “an attack on Boko Haram is an attack on the north”
and that it was “unconstitutional” and “unlawful” to ban them no-one threatened
them with arrest because the government of that day had the prescence of mind
to recognise the fact that the right to express one’s opinion, no matter how
reprehensible that opinion may be, is enshrined in the constitution.
The Federal Government should take a queue from that and
stop trying to manufacture a crisis where there is none or kill a fly with a
sledgehammer.
They should also consider declaring the Fulani militants and
herdsmen, who have been described by the International Terror Index as the
“fourth most deadly terrorist organisation in the world” and who have killed
more innocent Nigerians than any other terrorist organisation in the last two
years, as the malevolent, vicious, murderous and bona fide cowards and
terrorists that they are.
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