President of the Senate David Mark has
urged northern leaders to check the rising violent activities of Boko
Haram as its activities may break up the country. He said the code of
silence is ominous and that northern leaders who keep mute in the face
of the continuous insurgencies should speed up action on the matter.
The development came just as President
Goodluck Jonathan yesterday called on the National Assembly to urgently
review the country’s laws on terrorism in order to attack frontally the
security challenges posed by the Boko Haram sect.
Jonathan and Mark spoke while declaring open the 2011 Senate Retreat taking place in Uyo, Akwa Ibom State.
Speaking at the retreat with the theme,
“The National Assembly and National Security: Securing the Future for
Development”, Mark debunked insinuations that poverty is the root cause
of the crisis. “It is all about religious fundamentalism and ideology,
he said”.
“Poverty is not the cause, otherwise if
every poor person decides to carry arms, then, Nigeria will cease to
exist. So if people talk about poverty and hunger as the cause of the
Boko Haram menace, I say no.
“If the elders in the North cannot speak
out and stop this menace, let them tell us. Let them come out and say
so boldly, because the belief out there is that some elders know about
these people and decide to keep quiet. If care is not taken, the way
things are going, if the Boko Haram menace is not halted, it can lead to
break-up of Nigeria. Because there is an extent to which the people can
take it.
“Bombing of churches every Sunday,
killing innocent Christian worshippers has stretched the patience of the
people to the limit. There is limit to human endurance.”
Nonetheless, Mark cautioned Christians
on the danger of retaliation, saying that doing so means that they have
succeeded in achieving their target. “Leave vengeance to God,” he
appealed.
“If you are poor, does poverty encourage you to go and be killing your fellow human beings and bombing their places of worship?
“I think it is time we educate the
suicide bombers in the North that it is a wrong belief that killing
innocent people would automatically take them to heaven,” Mark stated.
Mark called on government to seek
international collaboration with its neighbours as well as western
countries on ways to tackle and uproot the Boko Haram sect.
Jonathan noted with sadness that
unguarded remarks and statements by do-or-die politicians had led to
destruction of several lives and properties in the northern parts of the
country.
Jonathan warned such politicians to stop
fanning the embers of ethnic and religious politics, adding that
national security should not be sacrificed on the altar of partisan
politics.
He called for joint collaboration of the
executive, legislative and judicial arms of government on the need to
review and strengthen existing laws on terrorism to reduce the
activities of the sect.
Welcoming the participants at the Senate
retreat, Governor Godswill Akpabio of Akwa Ibom State described the
retreat as divinely arranged and apt, coming at a time Nigeria is
experiencing security challenges.
Akpabio said that a strong union of the executive, legislature and judiciary was capable of solving the Boko Haram problem.
According to the governor, “the bombs
and the killings would not deter the government of President Goodluck
Jonathan from delivering on its mandate of transforming the country”.
Also on the occasion, speaker of the
House of Representatives Hon. Aminu Waziri Tambuwal said it was
regrettable that “Our country today is facing security challenges of
monumental proportions never witnessed in our history other than the
civil war. The spate of outbreak of violence has become so widespread
and frequent that the security apparatus of both the national and state
governments appear overwhelmed as the reactionary curfews have proved to
be near stop-gap measures.
“The damage to the Nigerian economy –
especially to the dwindling fortunes of the north where most of these
terrorism occur – is incalculable. This is even more worrisome against
the backdrop of the vaulting poverty in the region, its industrial and
infrastructural deficit. At a period when the region should be playing
catch-up, its future is further being circumscribed by a ruthless orgy
of violence that has continued despite all efforts. Ironically, the
majority of the perpetrators of this unwarranted violence are northern
elements and their immigrant collaborators.”
The speaker challenged the lawmakers to
rise up to their responsibilities in the face of the daunting security
situation and come up with ways to address the violence that has
continued to spread despite concerted efforts to contain it.
He said: “As representatives of the
people, the National Assembly cannot afford to watch while the nation
plunges further into the abyss. This retreat is therefore a critical
forum to examine all the avenues available for parliamentarians to end
this wanton, gratuitous violence.
“We need to re- examine our laws again,
to see if there are loopholes we can plug, and, if there are more
creative ways, we can liaise with the other arms of government to bring
synergy into the efforts to stop the unending state of violence. Again,
as noted earlier, as legislators, our perspective on tackling the
looming insecurity will essentially be in the areas of legislation and
oversight. There appears to be a general consensus that, among many
other causes, poverty and unemployment are some of the principal reasons
for youth vulnerability to violence.
“In this regard, it means, we must
examine whether budget crafting over the years has been efficient and
also whether budget implementation has been effective. If we notice and
admit failings in this regard, then, we must take a proactive and
decisive action.”
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