Separatism: Buhari’s ‘political solution’ must go beyond Kanu, Igboho // Breaking News
Separatism:
Buhari’s ‘political solution’ must go beyond Kanu, Igboho
By Olu Fasan
ABUBAKAR
Malami, Nigeria’s Attorney General and Minister of Justice, recently hinted
that the Federal Government might consider a “political solution” to the crisis
triggered by separatist agitations in Nigeria. Like
most Nigerians, I welcome the intervention. Truth is: there’s no military
solution to separatism which, at its core, is a political problem, and thus
calls for a political solution. However, any political solution must address
the root causes of separatist agitations in Nigeria, not just the symptoms.
Unfortunately, some people have interpreted “political solution”
to mean merely the release of Nnamdi Kanu, leader of the Indigenous People of
Biafra, IPOB, who is currently in detention facing trial, and Sunday “Igboho”
Adeyemo, the Yoruba Nation agitator, who is being detained in Benin Republic
and who the Nigerian government wants to extradite to the country to face
trial. Since Malami’s statement, there have been calls for the release of the separatist
leaders.
Indeed, recently, prominent
Igbo leaders under a group called “Highly Respected Igbo Greats”, led by Chief
Mbazulike Amaechi, the only surviving First Republic Minister, went to Abuja to
beg President Muhammadu Buhari to release Kanu.
On the tail of that visit, Yoruba leaders were under pressure to
meet President Buhari and beg him to free Igboho. But while these leaders are
well-intentioned, they are wrong. For by begging President Buhari to free Kanu
and Igboho, they allow him to take the moral high ground, which is utterly
undeserved!
Truth is: Kanu and Igboho are
political prisoners. Their offence or “crime”, which is advocating
self-determination for their people, is protected under international law. The
principle of non-extradition of political offenders is universally recognised,
so is the right of self-determination. Therefore, the extraordinary rendition
of Kanu from Kenya and the fatal brutalisation of Igboho’s household are
condemnable acts of state violence. In that respect, the Federal Government
should release Kanu and Igboho without octogenarian and nonagenarian elder
statesmen having to kowtow before the president and beg for their release.
Strangely, President Buhari said the Igbo leaders “made an
extremely difficult demand” on him by asking him to release Kanu. Why? Well,
according to Buhari, that would make him “interfere in the work of the
Judiciary”, which would “run contrary to the doctrine of separation of powers.”
But that’s disingenuous.
The state is the prosecutor in
both cases and can always terminate the proceedings and withdraw the cases from
court. A few months ago, I was a juror in a criminal case in London. Three days
into the trial, the judge told us, the 12 members of the jury, that the
prosecutor, that is, the Crown Prosecution Service, a state agency, had decided
to terminate the proceedings due to the insufficiency of the evidence. Under
the UK’s Code for Crown Prosecutors and, indeed, under the code for prosecutors
in any truly democratic and civilised society, prosecutors must terminate
proceedings in a case if there is not enough evidence against the defendant
and/or if it is not in the public interest to continue the prosecution. Both
conditions for termination of proceedings exist in the Kanu and Igboho cases.
First, the charges levelled against them, such as linking Igboho with Boko
Haram, are so frivolous and politically motivated that there can’t be enough
evidence against them. Second, it’s not in the public interest to continue the
proceedings against them, not least because they are political offenders and
their political “crime”, albeit involving isolated incidence of violence, pales
into insignificance when compared with the murderous activities of Boko Haram
terrorists and the bandits, who have just been declared as terrorists by a
court. So, on evidential and public interest grounds, the Federal Government
should free Kanu and Igboho without the ugly spectacle of respected elder
statesmen grovelling before the president!
Which leads me to what Chief Amaechi said during the Igbo
leaders’ visit to President Buhari. The elder stateman, First Republic Minister
of Aviation and the only surviving minister from that era, said that if Buhari
released Kanu to him, “he (Kanu) would no longer say the things he had been
saying”, adding that he could control the IPOB leader!
That’s
extraordinary! Was Chief Amaechi saying that if Kanu was released from
detention, he would no longer agitate for an independent state of Biafra? It
would be utterly strange if Kanu’srelease from detention leads to his Damascene
conversion. Surely, the only commitment Kanu could give to Chief Amaechi is
that he would not advocate violence. But he won’t promise to repudiate his
beliefs and stop calling for an independent Biafran nation.
Take the Spanish case. In June this year,
the Spanish government pardoned and released from jail nine Catalan
separatists, who led a failed independence attempt in 2017. But as they walked
through the prison gates, they posed for a photograph alongside a Catalan
independence flag and a banner reading “Freedom for Catalan”. In other words,
the prison sentences and the pardon did not extinguish their belief in
independence for Catalonia. What’s more, the Spanish government did not ask
them to abandon their beliefs. Rather, the prime minister, Pedro Sanchez, said
that his government decided to pardon the separatists in order to “draw a line
under past confrontations” and “open the way for talks”.
That’s precisely what should happen in
Nigeria. Any political solution to Nigeria’s separatism problem cannot just be
about Kanu and Igboho. Rather, it must involve opening the way for dialogue,
negotiation and agreement that would tackle the root causes of the separatist
impulses. Of course, separatism in Nigeria is not without a cause; it’s rooted
in a deep-seated sense of injustice and fear of ethnic domination, caused by
Nigeria’s structural imbalance.
Truth is, with genuinely autonomous regions
and equitable sharing of power at a leaner centre, the embers of separatism in
Nigeria will die away. Simply put: with proper restructuring, Nigeria’s unity
will be assured. So, yes, release Kanu and Igboho, but set in motion the
process of restructuring Nigeria!
Nigeria we hail thee
No comments