Saturday, March 7, 2020

Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Bishop of Truro

Dear Professor Segun Ogungbemi,

Chatham House is a uniquely special think tank. So is The Tavistock Institute. Among the UK Govt Ministries, there's the Department for International Development. I'm not conflating these three  but with regard to the subject matter, we are responding to,  it should be interesting to hear what The World Council of Churches has to say about The Persecution of Christians in Nigeria

Another assumption:

In the name of Pan-Africanism and the progress that we aspire to, the foundational premise is the unity of people and peoples living in peace and harmony. This is attainable, even if, unfortunately, the idea is still experiencing some birth pangs and teething problems, all of which have now led to various assumptions and conclusions which by their very nature, are not necessarily true.

 I should like to challenge two assumptions, the first either made or reported by Professor Jibrin Ibrahim, the second made by you. If both premises and/ or assumptions are not reliable, then the conclusions that are being based on such shaky foundations do not result in a quod erat demonstrandum

According to Professor Jibrin Ibrahim:

"The assumption is that Nigeria's multiple and complex security challenges including Islamist violence in the North East, worsening violent criminality and insecurity in the North West and ethno-religious violence, and farmer-herder conflict across large parts of central Nigeria are all directed at targeting Christians for persecution" –

more specifically, the Pew Research Center report is quoted as pointing to

"Islamist group Boko Haram in Nigeria, where direct targeting of Christian believers on a comprehensive scale set out to "eliminate Christianity and pave the way for the total Islamisation of the country".

I should like to belabour this point. To begin with, the overwhelming majority of Boko Haram's victims happen to be Muslims. So, the challenge to the Pew Research assumption is, where is the evidence or proof that Boko Haram has as its agenda to "eliminate Christianity and pave the way for the total Islamisation of the country" ?

You (dear Professor Segun Ogungbemi), a fellow traveller and a fellow sufferer,  not shuffering and Shmiling , in this existential moment, I share your sense of anguish as you hint darkly about "an apparent complicity of the present government". Based on the assumptions listed by your brother Professor Jibrin Ibrahim, that, plus all the bad news about the security/ insecurity situation in Nigeria, the banditry, lawlessness, anarchy and chaos that is our daily heritage provides sufficient  reason for you  to advocate ( almost explicitly, certainly by implication)  separation – "separation " indeed –  easier said than done – like "To take up arms against a sea of troubles and by opposing end them?"

"Amidst the cries of Let's build a nation!

Separation, y'all, separation t y'all

Separation, separation"

You say that "we should go our separate ways to have peace." You say that you are sure that "The scary picture of the cost of separation painted by the Cardinal is an assumption"

The cardinal probably has in mind Jesus suffering on the cross and after Biafra, he must be thinking about what could be the bloody cost of separation, especially if it is not done peacefully, via e.g. a Constitutional Conference at which the stakeholders and separatists decide to secede peacefully.

Sir, there is hope, yet. In my humble opinion and in the humble opinion of other Nigerians ably argued elsewhere, even in the prevailing circumstances, separation is not the solution.  Look at the entity known as the European Union, birthed after two tragic world wars.  You may want to point to the violent disintegration of what was once Tito's Yugoslavia. You may pray and hope that by "separation" you do not mean the violent disintegration of Nigeria, having learned the tragic lesson from the short-lived experiment that was buried as Biafra.

BTW , I met  Chuck Anthony – an old friend,  two weeks ago – I was at  his gig in the Old Town in Stockholm and he was in tremendous form ,  he told me a little about when he played with Fela  - he played guitar  in this 2000 Blacks  that very positive vision for Nigeria: Unity, you and me…

 

 


On Sat, 7 Mar 2020 at 13:44, segun ogungbemi <seguno2013@gmail.com> wrote:

"He said that all of us Nigerians feel that the cost of staying together as a Nation is extremely high and too many of us want to opt out of the State. He warned however that the cost of our being torn apart would be much higher and we should reflect seriously on what we pray for. I endorse the wise words of the cardinal." Professor Jibrin Ibrahim. 

The scary picture of the cost of separation painted by the Cardinal is an assumption. We have been forced by the British to serve their economic and imperialist interests. Since the British left, we have not had enduring peace. The present carnage perpetrated by Boko Haram, Fulani herder killers, etc with impunity plus an apparent complicity of the present government are convincing indicators in my view that we should go our separate ways to have peace. 

 Now the elites who exploit the wealth of the country are drumming fear of separation. It is better to try to be independent than to remain in the state of nature. The wise saying of the Yoruba is instructive, Orisa bo' gbemi, wa fimi sile bo' bami, meaning, a deity that does not improve my quality of life,  it is better to leave me in my existential condition. 

It is better to try that option of being in our existential conditions. 

Segun Ogungbemi. 




On Fri, Mar 6, 2020, 5:34 AM Jibrin Ibrahim <jibrinibrahim891@gmail.com> wrote:

Bishop of Truro, Extremism and Religious Persecution in Nigeria


Jibrin Ibrahim, Friday Column, Daily Trust, 6th March 2020 


Last week, I attended a workshop at Wilton Part in Sussex on the theme of fostering social cohesion in Nigeria. It was organized by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office. The workshop title is framed rather diplomatically as the focus of discussions was the Bishop of Truro's 2019 independent review into the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office's work to support persecuted Christians in Nigeria and globally. The assumption is that Nigeria's multiple and complex security challenges including Islamist violence in the North East, worsening violent criminality and insecurity in the North West and ethno-religious violence, and farmer-herder conflict across large parts of central Nigeria are all directed at targeting Christians for persecution. For a country with a highly religiously observant population that is roughly divided between the two main established religions of Islam and Christianity, you cannot have a theme as weighty as this.

The report says there is widespread evidence showing that today, Christians constitute by far the most widely persecuted religion. They cite the Pew Research Center report that in 2016 Christians were targeted in 144 countries, a rise from 125 in 2015. It affirms that the most serious threat to Christian communities came from the militant Islamist group Boko Haram in Nigeria, where direct targeting of Christian believers on a comprehensive scale set out to "eliminate Christianity and pave the way for the total Islamisation of the country". They cite an investigation showed that in 2018 far more Christians in Nigeria were killed in violence in which religious faith was a critical factor than anywhere else in the world; Nigeria accounted for 3,731 of the 4,136 fatalities: 90 percent of the total.  

The other area of focus of the report is what they call the new and growing threat to mainly Christian farming communities had emerged from nomadic Fulani herdsmen. The Fulani, says the report, carry out attacks against Christian communities especially in Nigeria's 'Middle Belt', the border territory between the Hausa-speaking Muslim areas in northern Nigeria and land further south mainly populated by Christians. Reports also showed mostly retaliatory attacks against Fulani by "predominantly" Christian farmers, such as the November 2016 killing of about 50 mainly Fulani pastoralists by ethnic Bachama local residents in Numan district, Adamawa state. The causes of this inter-communal conflict are complex and "attributed to many factors". That said whilst the conflict cannot simply be seen in terms of religion, it is equally simplistic not to see the religious dimension as a significantly exacerbating factor, and the Fulani attacks have repeatedly demonstrated a clear intent to target Christians, and potent symbols of Christian identity.

The general view of the workshop participants, in my understanding, was that the Bishop of Truro, by his terms of reference, worked from the answer to the question and therefore found what he was asked to look for. Many participants pointed out there is indeed evidence of targeting of Christians in Nigeria's growing culture of violence but also evidence of the targeting of Muslims by the same forces. It is therefore important to have some comparative perspective and balance in assessing the situation. In addition, the multiple conflicts and rapid growth of criminal gangs targeting all sectors of society and community should guide us into developing a more complex evaluation of what is going on. 

One of the participants who I referred to in my column last week and who is the Special Adviser on Agriculture, Dr. Andrew Kwasari took up the issue of Fulani herdsmen targeting Christians in the Middle Belt. He drew attention to the work done by the National Committee on the crisis composed of governors and ministers that have found out that essentially, it is a crisis generated by climate change, population growth, expansion of farming and transhumance agriculture based on competition in access to land, pasture and water with feasible solutions. The problem, he argued is that too many politicians and religious conflict entrepreneurs have a stake in deepening the conflict and making solutions difficult to implement. He argued that the ten-year National Livestock Transformation Plan is workable and the surest path to peace and development and should be allowed to work.

The workshop was attended by major faith leaders in the country, inter-faith advocacy groups, academics and human rights campaigners. There was a lot of discussion on expanding the domain of inter-faith dialogue between Muslim and Christian groups to address the continuous flow of inter-faith conflicts and misunderstanding that emerge on a daily basis. Each religious group was also encouraged to counter conflict entrepreneurs from within that are more interested in generating and exacerbating rather than ending the conflicts. Some of the faith leaders complained bitterly that politician and governments will cause conflict and then call on religious leaders to pray and resolve the conflicts. We must work together if we are to build peace.

One issue that called for a lot of attention was the growing sense of injustice in the country, from virtually all quarters. When people believe that are victims of injustice, it's difficult for them to embrace peace. There can be little progress in peace building unless State actors take up the issue of addressing concerns on the massive injustice in the country. The objective must be for all stakeholders to continue to discuss the challenges of inter-communal violence in Nigeria and examine how collectively government, civil society, faith-based and community organisations and others can work together to build solutions. We need to be more honest in considering the underlying resource competition driving conflict and insecurity in the country. Nigeria is in a dangerous phase in its development where each community now believes the State is not ready to address its problems and that it has to procure arms to engage in self-help. We need to go back to basics such as considering alternative dispute settlement mechanisms to address impunity for those responsible and demands for justice is met for all, including members of religious groups. In this regard, participants were urged to highlight and promote examples in which inter-faith initiatives to promote peace and foster social cohesion have worked are working with the objective of replicating them.

The Bishop of Truro's report advocated for religious protection, promoting inclusive high-quality education for all and addressing social-economic issues. Clearly, the massive growth of poverty in Nigeria over the past decade makes peace building a very difficult enterprise. The youth bulge and unemployment for both the educated and uneducated young person's makes interlocutors for peace scarce. These are all elements about building a more inclusive State and society that we have to take on board. The challenge here is the dominance of a self-serving political class whose only objective appears to be the primitive accumulation of capital and self-aggrandisement.

The workshop was conducted under Chattam House Rules so individuals opinions cannot be quoted. Cardinal John Onaiyekan however gave me permission to refer to his major recommendation to the meeting. He said that all of us Nigerians feel that the cost of staying together as a Nation is extremely high and too many of us want to opt out of the State. He warned however that the cost of our being torn apart would be much higher and we should reflect seriously on what we pray for. I endorse the wise words of the cardinal. 

 

Professor Jibrin Ibrahim
Senior Fellow
Centre for Democracy and Development, Abuja
Follow me on twitter @jibrinibrahim17

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