No matter the cost, the excesses of extremist group, Boko Haram, must
stop, President Goodluck Jonathan has vowed in a new resolve that comes
two weeks into a broad military campaign to root out the militants in
three northeast states.
“The excesses of Boko Haram must stop.
That is the decision of this present government now. It must stop,
whatever it will cost the government, it must stop,” Mr. Jonathan said
in an interview with journalists on the sideline of the 21st ordinary
session of the Assembly of Heads of State and Government of the Africa
Union holding in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
The president said his
administration would not fold its arms and watch the violent Islamic
group continue to kill innocent citizens.
The President who noted
that terrorism was a global problem with the United States and United
Kingdom and other countries having their shares, said his administration
was working to ensure it is contained with immediate, medium and long
term strategies.
Mr. Jonathan said under the short term, military
intervention was compulsory since a lot of weapons found their ways
into the country because of the Libya crisis and it was important for
the weapons to be mopped up.
“For the short term, of course,
there must be military intervention, we must beef up security, we must
change the security architecture to make sure that we detect that
something is about to happen before it happens so that we will be able
to stop it,” he said.
“We have stopped a number of incidents in
the country. It is just that the few that happened affect life and
whenever life is affected, you will not even think that somebody is
doing anything.”
The president said the need to “go all out to
make sure that we seize these weapons” informed the recent declaration
of emergency rule in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe states. “We must comb the
whole place to seize all these weapons and so on.”
“A lot of free
weapons come in because of the Libya crisis. We must seize them. They
are illegal weapons and must be seized and you cannot do that without
declaring a state of emergency to enable the military enter any house,
whether it is a residential building, it is a church, a mosque, a
shrine, anywhere, hotel, anything that we suspect. We will be able to
enter and seize these weapons.
He said in the medium term, the
government will concentrate more on education as the part of the country
where there is prevalence of Boko Haram activities has the highest rate
of school dropout.
As part of that plan, the federal government
will intervene to improve education in those areas although the
Constitution puts the issue of basic education under the watch of state
and local governments.
He enumerated creating economic
environment as another approach adopted by government, so that
individuals would be able to fend for themselves.
“We are doing
that in terms of our own agriculture programme. We are doing that in
what we call community services, local roads, renovation of health
centres, primary schools and so on. A number of men and women are
involved; road rehabilitation, clearing of roads and so on.
“So,
we are also encouraging young people to be on their own through YouWin.
The fairly enlightened ones who think they have some businesses to do
will submit a proposal to a neutral body and if they select you, we give
you grant, not loan. That alone is helping.
“The idea is that if
you can set up micro and small businesses, that if one youth that
benefit can employ five others that means by the time you give to 1000
and something to multiply by five on the average and the results are
quite promising. And we are doing robustly in agriculture.
“That
is why we are encouraging more of irrigation because like in the
northern part of the country, where you have vast land for farming,
incidentally it is savannah area where water is not that common compared
to the south. So, we must irrigate to provide water and have farm
settlements.
“Because some of the interviews they get from people
who have been involved and were arrested, they didn’t even know. They
just tell them stories and they are just carried away. Coupled with the
fact that some of them are sub adults and they don’t have means of
survival and their parents themselves cannot take care of them. So, they
become very susceptible to mischievous characters who can just provide
them little food and use them to kill people.”
The President also
said the threat posed by the Islamic sect to the country and the sub
region could be more devastating if the government had not moved fast.
He
said Nigeria was becoming difficult for the militants to operate, as
some of the sect members recently moved into Niger Republic with suicide
attacks in two places simultaneously leading to the death of about 20
Nigerien soldiers.
“Niger Republic had been relatively calm
although they have been noticing the movement because it is a general
area from Mali, Niger, Chad to Nigeria, but because Nigeria is fairly
big, we now said ‘no, this must stop,’ Mr. Jonathan said.
“They
are now moving, Central Africa, North Africa, West Africa; East Africa
is not also safe. Even in Ethiopia here, there were a lot of terrorist
activities before but it is now coming down. Same with Somalia. So, it
is only southern Africa that is relatively peaceful in terms of terror.
“It
is a serious business. That it why all presidents and heads of
government on this continent must come together to fight, otherwise,
they will create more problems especially for countries that cannot
contain them.
“Luckily, Nigeria is fairly rugged, fairly robust.
So, we can confront it and we are confronting it now because we can no
longer watch people being killed and it must stop.”
Source
http://premiumtimesng.com/news/136224-jonathan-vows-to-stop-boko-haram-at-all-cost.html
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