For the people of Kaninkon Kingdom in Southern Kaduna, this was a bleak
Christmas. On Christmas Eve and on Christmas day armed Fulani herdsmen
attacked and destroyed Goska village, killing, maiming, and burning.
This attack occurred in spite of the area having been put under a
24-hour curfew by the state government, an indication of the brazenness
and sense of impunity on the part of the well-armed attackers
The attack is part of a broader genocidal war against the people of
Southern Kaduna state, a war that is in its 5th year and has killed
thousands of people in their homes and farms and destroyed the
livelihoods of tens of thousands more. As we speak an estimated 53
villages lay in ruins, some of them occupied by Fulani herdsmen and
their cattle, a forceful annexation that recalls the similarly forceful
displacement in Agatu.
Let’s be clear: the crisis predates the administration of Governor
Nasir el-Rufai, so he cannot be accused of causing it or of being behind
it as some people are insinuating. However, his utterances and actions
in the past and the present have exacerbated the problem and emboldened
the attackers. An ill-tempered man given to incendiary, inciting, and
divisive outbursts, El-Rufai has made several egregious errors in
dealing with the crisis. Some of these errors are errors of approach,
thinking, and mentality. The errors have inspired actions that have
wittingly or unwittingly transformed what was a low-level series of
massacres into a full-blown genocide.
To understand some of the Governor’s current failures in dealing with
the killings, you have to understand his past utterances, his
incendiary character, his insensitivity, and his inability to moderate
his thinking and resultant public expressions, all of which offer clues
about why he has no credibility or political capital to solve the
problem and why he is widely perceived as part of the problem, not its
solution. Let’s consider the governor’s many problems in this regard.
El-Rufai is widely regarded as a Fulani supremacist, and with good
reason. On July 12, 2012, he tweeted the following: “We will write this
for all to read. Anyone, soldier or not that kills the Fulani takes a
loan repayable one day no matter how long it takes.” The governor’s
response to the killings in Southern Kaduna has been eerily consistent
with this mindset. In a recent chat with newsmen in Kaduna, the governor
made three statements that substantiate this Fulani supremacist
statement from four years ago.
First, he said when he became governor, he traced the attackers to
Cameroon, Chad, and Niger and sent a message to them that one of their
own, a Fulani like them, was now governor. This statement displays a
spectacularly parochial mentality. A governor of a Nigerian state was
basically making appeals based on ethnic kinship and brotherhood to a
group of foreign killers of people in his own Nigerian state! In other
words, he was appeasing his murderous foreign kinsmen at the expense of
indigenes of his state who are not his ethnic kinsmen but whose safety
and interests he swore to defend. The governor shocking statement
indicates that ethnic solidarity trumped his constitutional obligations
to protect Southern Kaduna citizens from the external threats of foreign
Fulani herdsmen.
Second, the governor told the journalists that the crisis began in
the aftermath of the 2011 presidential elections when foreign Fulani
herdsmen passing through Southern Kaduna were attacked with some of them
killed and their cattle stolen. The governor claimed that the ongoing
genocidal killings are revenge for the 2011 attacks.
It was irresponsible for the governor to make this statement without
providing a shred of evidence other than that this is what the foreign
Fulani attackers told his emissaries who traced them to various
neighboring countries. What the governor was doing was legitimizing the
herdsmen’s genocidal campaign by giving it the cover of revenge. He was
lending gubernatorial authority and credibility to the claims of foreign
invaders that they are revenging the killing of their kinsmen on
Nigerian soil! Shocking as it is, however, the governor’s current
explanation is consistent with the tweet I quoted because he is still
espousing and promoting what he, as a Fulani man, believes to be the
Fulani ethos of revenge. El-Rufai was also doing classic victim blaming,
blaming the victims for provoking the killers and bringing calamity
upon themselves.
Then, of course, there is the fact that even if the claim of revenge
were legitimate, one would be compelled to ask how much Southern Kaduna
blood would need to be spilled to pay for the herdsmen and cattle
allegedly killed in 2011. How long is this Fulani revenge spree supposed
to last? Ten years? Twenty? Is this Fulani blood debt that El-Rufai
speaks of eternal? This genocide has been going on for five years
already. By the way, who or what gave foreigners the permission to
freely violate Nigeria’s borders and penetrate deep into the Nigerian
hinterland with their cattle and destroy farmlands in the process?
Should any claim by people who have illegally breached our borders and
destroyed the farmlands of Nigerian citizens be taken seriously let
alone privileged above the suffering of citizens?
Third, El-Rufai stated that he had paid off the attackers as a way to
stop them from continuing the killings. This is, of course, an
explosive confession. He admitted to paying foreigners who illegally
breached Nigeria’s borders to attack citizens of his state. This begs
the question of why, in spite of the payments, the attacks have
continued and have become more intense. It also advertises the
governor’s poor judgment. He rewarded those who confessed to killing
citizens of his state, instead of working with the federal government to
hold them accountable or to stop them from further breaching our
borders to kill citizens.
It is safe to say the governor’s poor judgment is anchored on ethnic
solidarity with the foreign killers. Furthermore, to the extent that
El-Rufai used state funds to pay the so-called compensation to the
foreign killer herdsmen, the beleaguered people of Southern Kaduna,
partakers in the state’s patrimony, were in fact being forced to pay
their killers to stop killing them! It is not out of place to speculate
that the killers may have used the governor’s payments to acquire more
sophisticated weapons, which may explain why the scope, intensity, and
sophistication of the killings have increased in recent months.
These confessed blunders are consistent with the governor’s character
and past utterances. In an interview before he became governor,
el-Rufai was asked about the killing of some Southern Nigerian youth
corpers in the 2011 post-election violence in Kaduna. He objected
vehemently to the premise of the question. He wondered why the press was
obsessed with a few youth corp members who were killed by hoodlums and
asked why there was no concern for “our people” who were killed in
Southern Kaduna. By “our people” he meant Hausa-Fulani people. This
interview was quite revealing, for it showed that he thinks of
victimhood in strictly ethno-religious terms.
Today, as he gropes confusingly to get a handle on the killings, the
governor is blaming nameless people he accuses of trying to “divide the
people” along religious and ethnic lines. Such rhetoric from him is
laughably hypocritical, for no one has contributed to the atmosphere of
ethno-religious division in Kaduna State than El-Rufai. In his quest for
power, he pandered shamelessly to ethno-religious loyalties, much to
the consternation of those who regarded him as being above such
sentiments. Having seemingly written off Southern Kaduna, a PDP
stronghold, el-Rufai engaged in the most blatantly ethno-religiously
divisive campaign in the state’s history, projecting himself as a
champion of Fulani and Hausa-Fulani interest. He became a proud
provincial man as his controversial tweets indicate, even though those
who know him personally say the man is urbane and cosmopolitan.
El-Rufai is now captive to his own political posturing and long-held
supremacist tendencies. His approach to the killings has continued to
bear out his tendency for stoking unnecessary drama, for ethno-religious
insensitivity, and for personalizing public issues. He sees the
Southern Kaduna people as blame-worthy and the Fulani herdsmen killers
as deserving of appeasement. A few weeks ago, as though to further
humiliate the people of Southern Kaduna in their distress, the governor
fancifully launched what he called “apology billboards.” The billboards
were erected across the local governments of Southern Kaduna. In other
words, El-Rufai’s solution to the killings is to force the people of
Southern Kaduna, the victims, to apologize to their killers. It was a
humiliating political subjugation of a people already under genocidal
siege. The Southern Kaduna people were paying for billboards that
apologized to their killers instead of the other way round. And this was
haughtily done without consulting with the Southern Kaduna people.
As the governor blames others, including Niger Delta militants (!),
he has not stopped to acknowledge that his past and present utterances
and gestures have created an atmosphere of distrust between him and the
people of Southern Kaduna and between the ethnic and religious groups of
the state. He needs to look inward and take responsibility for stoking
ethno-religious distrust and for emboldening the killers or at least
giving them the impression that a sympathetic member of their
ethno-religious group is in power, and that this kinsman is willing to
legitimize their murderous cause and even pay them appeasement money. No
wonder the people of Southern Kaduna attacked him on his visit there
last week. They were tired of the governor’s condescending attitude, his
empty preachments, and his efforts to humiliate them while rewarding
their tormentors.
Helpless in the face of his inability to contain the rising current
of ethno-religious division in the state, the governor has belatedly run
to President Buhari to deploy more troops to Southern Kaduna
communities. This is the same army, by the way, that on July 20 2014,
El-Rufai tweeted the following about: “Genocidal Jonathanian army kills
once again.” On that occasion, El-Rufai was condemning the killing of
some Shiite members by soldiers. He was obviously pandering and
opportunistically exploiting the Shiite’s sectarian angst because today
he is the biggest persecutor of the Shiite in Nigeria. Moreover, he has
partnered with the same army he described as genocidal to wage his war
against the Shiite minority.
The proverbial chickens are coming home to roost for El-Rufai. His
past utterances, his prior political posturing, his divisive,
incendiary, and insensitive ethno-religious pandering and comments are
coming back to haunt him. He has no one but himself to blame. He has
little sympathy, having arrogantly and selfishly alienated foes and
friends alike.
El-Rufai’s current travail offers a poignant lesson, which is that
those seeking political positions should moderate their supremacist
ideologies, temper their arrogance, and stop pandering to or riding the
wave of popular but fleeting primordial anger.
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