This was done in 1984 but it failed. I cannot run away. I am Ayo Fayose. If you hit me, you hit trouble. If I hit you, you will be in trouble. Nigeria is a free nation and this nation will not be taken for an Islamic nation. Today, I decree the return of a PDP government in 2019"- Governor Ayo Fayose, Port Harcourt, 26th February, 2016.
Ayo Fayose's words give cause for concern and I
must confess that I share his views. Ever since my TED EX lecture in
2014 which was titled ''the Rise Of Islamic Fundamentalism In Nigeria''
my greatest crime, in the eyes of my detractors, is that I have
fearlessly and continuously stood up to and spoken out against the evil
of islamic fundamentalism and the cancer of islamist terror in our
country.
Whether it be Boko Haram and its numerous
facilitators and sponsors, the Fulani militias and herdsmen, the APC
hidden agenda of islamisation of Nigeria or elements within the core
northern ruling class who have often promoted and, in some cases openly
supported and funded, terror and the cold-blooded murder of our
compatriots, I have always stood against it.
This does not mean that I am anti-Muslim because I
am not. I believe in religious diversity and I consider it to be a
privilige to live in a plural, multi-religious and multi-ethnic nation
where people of all faiths are respected and are allowed to live their
lives freely. As a matter of fact I believe that our diversity is our
strength and that there is nothing more beautiful than a true Muslim or a
true Christian practicing their faith in accordance with their
traditions. We are, after all, all children of Abraham and what binds us
together is our faith and belief in one God that created the universe
and that rules in the affairs of men.
What I will not accept though is the
implementation of a terrorist agenda and the destruction of the lives
and way of life of others by a small minority of religious zealots and
ethnic bigots. I will not accept the fellowship of those that have been
brainwashed and utterly possessed by the Salifist/Wahhabi philosophy
which was covertly exported to much of the Sunni Muslim world by
sinister and clandestine forces that reside in Saudi Arabia. I cannot
abide those that kill in the name of God and that use the great faith of
Islam to oppress others and force them to do their will.
Those of us that are not Muslims are not slaves
in this country and neither can we ever be. Those of us that are
moderate Muslims in this country and that do not share the abominable
views of the Islamic fundamentalists and the islamists cannot be slaves
either. Yet that does not mean that a misguided few will not attempt to
impose their will on the rest of us. To this extent I wholeheartedly
concur with Ayo Fayose's view that there are covert moves by some
extremists that are in the corridors of power to quietly and secretly
islamise our country and that they are attempting to do so with contempt
and impunity. If anyone doubts that this is the case or believes that
it cannot happen they should read the history of Turkey and find out how
what was once a christian nation was eventually transformed into a full
blown Muslim state.
The truth is that Fayose has said nothing new. I
have said it many times before. I saw this coming and I warned Nigerians
against it but no-one would listen. Now the scales are slowly falling
from their eyes. Two events in the last few days, more than any others
in recent times, have confirmed this fact. Firstly there was the
horrendous massacre of over 300 people in Agatu, Benue state, a
christian community, by hundreds of well-armed Muslim Fulani militias
and herdsmen. In their usual way when it comes to atrocities committed
by the Fulani militias, our government refused to comment on or react to
the ugly incident for many days and up until there was a national and
international outcry.
Secondly there was the abduction of a 14 year old
Christian girl by the name of Esse from her home in Bayelsa state to
far away Kano where she was kept from her parents, forced to convert to
Islam, married off to an old man against her will and hidden in the Emir
of Kano's palace. All efforts by her parents to see and free their
daughter have failed and to make matters worse officials of both the
state and Federal government have refused to intervene and rescue the
little girl from the slavery and torment of her abductors.
I wonder how much more shame, injustice and
indignity we have to suffer as a faith and as a people before we react
to such wickedness and injustice? We have even been denied the right to
protest because when we do so we are accused, quite wrongly, of being
anti-Islam. Well I am not anti-Islam but I am anti-injustice. I am not
anti-Islam but I am anti-wickedness, anti-ethnic and religious
domination, anti-slavery, anti-fascism, anti-religious extremism and
bigotry, anti-pedophilia, anti-Boko Haram, anti-Boko Haram sponsors and
anti-armed Fulani militias and herdsmen. I am anti-anything that brings
blood, sweat and tears to my people and anti-anyone that kills, steals
and destroys my nation and my compatriots.
I am anti-the dark forces from hell who have
plagued our people with their unadulterated violence and their religious
and ethnic intolerance over the years and who erroneously believe that
they own Nigeria. The days of remaining silent out of fear of reprisals
and insults or in the name of political correctness are long over. If I
am the only voice left in Nigeria to do so I will continue to speak out
and stand against this evil. I will also speak out against the
notoriously indifferent, lukewarm, cowardly and stoic disposition of
those amongst us who appear to be happy to be the victims and who are
ready to accept this barbarity and live with it.
No matter what I will not bend from this course, I
will not flinch and I will not compromise. I will not run away from my
calling and doing that which the Living God has called me to do. I would
rather we redefine Nigeria than sit by silently as my people and those
that share my faith are slowly and systematically turned into slaves by a
tiny minority.
Consider the following. Thousands of IPOB members
and Biafrans are regularly slaughtered by our security agencies. We
must ask, wither Nigeria? Thousands of Shia Muslims are murdered in cold
blood and regularly tormented by our Armed Forces. We must ask, whither
Nigeria? Thousands of Middle Belters and southerners are regularly
raped, abducted and butchered by Fulani militias and herdsmen. We must
ask, whither Nigeria? Thousands of ordinary working class northerners
are regularly massacred by Boko Haram. We must ask, whither Nigeria?
Yet all hope is not lost and we must not despair.
I am glad that President Muhamnadu Buhari has said that our country
will not join the military coalition of Islamic nations that Saudi
Arabia is putting together. This is a welcome development that has
allayed the fears of many but it is clearly not enough and he must go
further.
The next step that he must take is to properly
address the agitation for Biafra and attempt to make life a little
easier and better for the people of the east. He must acknowledge the
fact that self-determination is an inalienable right and that the only
way to forge national unity is by consensus and the enthronement of
equity and justice and not by state-sponsored tyranny and the spilling
of blood.
He must accept the fact that when you beat a
child for long enough one day he will stand up, say ‘’enough is
enough’’, rise up in his own defense and beat you back. It is time for
us to stop beating those that call themselves Biafrans and to stop
regarding Biafra as a dirty word. It is time for us to enter into a
meaningful dialogue with them rather than subject them to insults and
opprobrium.
It takes nothing from Nigeria if and when we make
these concessions. As a matter of fact the contrary is the case: it
would simply confirm our humanity and reaffirm our sense of justice and
decency. Whether those that hold the levers of power in our
pathologically conservative and obsessive ruling class wish to
acknowledge and accept it or not, today's reality is that Mr. Nnamdi
Kanu, rightly or wrongly, has become a hero to millions of young Igbos
all over the world. His name is etched in their hearts and memories.
Like Che Guevera and Fidel Castro of old he
brings the hope of a new and better life to an aggrieved and abused
people and a new generation. He is viewed by the majority of his kinsmen
as the emancipator of an oppressed region and the champion of their
collective aspirations and dreams. Simply put he has been transformed
and elevated into the status of a living symbol: a symbol of the their
deep yearning for liberty and freedom.
We can be rest assured that the seed that he has
planted in the psyche of the Igbo youth is here to stay. As each day
passes it grows bigger and stronger and it becomes more and more
irresistible. The appropriate response to the agitation for Biafra is
not the forceful establishment and implementation of an insidious and
relentless religious and ethnic agenda which is designed to hold Nigeria
together by force because this will not work. Instead it is a display
of maturity, understanding, moderation, equity and fair play in all
matters touching and concerning governance and the running of the
Nigerian state. A better understanding and appreciation of this most
basic of all principles will bring more stability to our country and
more joy to our people. Indeed it is the only way to guarantee our peace
and it may well buy a united and indivisible Nigeria many more years.
"The "Fulani Cattle Rearers" is a remix of the Serbian Vigilantes that Slobodan Milosevic used to intimidate the rest of Yugoslavia, until the Croats and the Albanians decided to fight back. Today, Yugoslavia is dead and buried, and Croatia is one of the success stories of Europe. If some people think they can intimidate the rest of us, the arms dealers are looking for customers, and the same people that sold them guns will sell to everyone else".
I am a man of peace and I abhor violence yet this is indeed food for thought.
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