The Niger Delta Question: Incubating the Future Suicide
Bombers of Nigeria
By
Hosiah Emmanuel
hosiah.emmanuel@gmail.com
December 2005
Paul Bremer was the United States Administrator of Iraq after the fall of
Saddam. Angered by an attack on him in a tiny Shia muslim newspaper, he
ordered with an announcement in Arabic that the newspaper be closed. It was
closed but this immediately started the Najaf uprising and the rise of an
hitherto unknown Muqtada al-Sadr to fight the Americans. Thousands of
Americans and Iraqis have since died on account of this leaving America in
more confusion as to what to do with Iraq as ever. This is one example of
how not to use power.
Let's go to Yenagoa in Bayelsa state of Nigeria. In the desperate attempt
by Emperor Olusegun Obasanjo of Nigeria to remove the former Governor
Alamieyeseigha of Bayelsa, his military men closed the state broadcasting
corporation and chased away law-abiding citizens of Nigeria who worked
there. Unlike in Najaf, he succeeded to cow Yenagoa and removed the
Governor in a violent rape of the Constitution of the Federation of
Nigeria. However, this among other acts of state-repression of the people
of the Niger Delta in particular, has given an hitherto unknown group, 'The
Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND)', a reason for its
recent deadly attack on oil installations in Nigeria and the ongoing
hostage-taking of four foreign oil-workers. It is almost 2 weeks since the
hostages were taken, but the almighty Federal Government of emperor Obasanjo
is yet to secure their release. The MEND demands the release of both
Alamieyeseigha and another foremost Niger Delta freedom fighter, Alh Dokubo
Asari who is in prison custody undergoing a trumped charge of treason as a
pre-condition for the release of the hostages. They also demand that the
Anglo-Dutch oil multi-national, Shell Petroleum Development Company honour
the proclamation of the National Assembly that $1.5 billion be paid to the
Ijaws of Bayelsa as compensation for over 4 decades of oil exploration and
environmental abuse. The Federal Government on the other hand claims that
the Nigerian judiciary which is known to be one of the most corrupt and
inefficient judiciaries in the world would have to determine the fate of
Alamieyeseigha and Asari. This is the same judiciary whose orders have been
flouted recklessly by the Federal Government.
Obasanjo's government has repeatedly shown that the only language it
understands is that of violence. To be given an audience in Obasanjo's
Nigeria you need a gun. MEND has guns and so they have audience with the
powerful Obasanjo's government. When Asari had guns, he had audience with
Obasanjo but he was arm-twisted to sell his guns to Obasanjo and today he
finds himself in Obasanjo's prison. With this knowledge, it looks to me
that only militancy will resolve the Niger Delta question. But, what is the
Niger Delta Question?
The Niger Delta question dates back to Nigeria's pre-independent, colonial
days. It is the same question for which the Willink 'minorities and Fiscal
Commission' reported in mid-1958 after an exhaustive series of hearings
across the country. Though recommendations of the commission were
manipulated by the powers-that-be before the final release, there was a
somewhat bold and remarkable recommendation that:
"there is an overwhelming need for a SPECIAL IJAW AREA consisting
mainly of the Ijaw people in the Eastern region, and taking in from the
Western Region the Western Ijaws, consisting as it does mainly of the delta
of the Niger, and that it should, be regarded rather as a special
development area, requiring particular economic assistance."
Due to political expediencies of the major ethnic groups of the time, this
recommendation was not followed. The casualty figure that has arisen from
the poverty and misery of the people of this endangered region as a result
of this non-compliance is not investigated but I dare say that it is
collosal!
The Niger Delta question is the same Ogoni question: The Ogonis led by the
late playwright, Ken Saro-Wiwa asked this question but were massacred by the
Nigerian central government. The chiefs, youths and their brightest were
silenced in the process, such that Ogoni today, has no voice to continue to
ask the question. The Ijaw youths took it from where the Ken Saro-Wiwa
Ogonis stopped and they have since faced brutal military force of the
Nigerian central government. There have been massacres of children, women
and the aged in Yenagoa, Odi, Odioma, Warri, Port-Harcourt and many other
parts of the Delta in response to demands for a better deal for the people
of the Niger Delta in the Nigerian Federation.
To put it more concretely, the Niger Delta question is simple: that a region
which accounts for 90% of Nigeria's revenue be developed; that the means of
livelihood of its inhabitants have been greatly hampered by the exploration
activities that feed the rest of the nation. The question is about a fair
deal for some very endangered Nigerians in Nigeria.
Various militant groups have emerged from the region at different times and
circumstances to try to compel the central government to answer this
question. The lack of will of past leaders like the Azikiwes and Awolowos
and Balewas to implement the mild recommendation in the Willink Commission
report was met with Late Major Isaac Adaka Boro's '12-day revolution' in
1966 but he was suppressed. The Ijaw Youths of the Kaiama declaration fame
in 1992 were also repressed. Asari Dokubo of the Niger Delta People's
Volunteer Force was arm-twisted, his guns taken from him and presently in
prison facing treason charge.
Today, we have a new group, The MEND. The federal security operatives are
still trying to understand the formation of this group. The MEND claims in
one of their statements to be:
"a union of all relevant militant groups in the Niger Delta. This
includes all units headed by Alhaji Asari."
When asked whom their leader was, they refused to say. This is a remarkable
development because the Niger Delta groups (I call them freedom fighters)
seem to have graduated in war strategies. Asari was identified as the
arrow-head of NPDVF movement and so it was easy to immobilize him and hence
his group. The MEND seems to have no form. Have they read Robert Greene's
"The 48 Laws of Power"? Especially Law 48 which advised "Formlessness" as
an effective means of winning power? Robert Greene wrote about this Law of
power thus:
"By taking a shape, by having a visible plan, you open yourself to
attack. Instead of taking a form for your enemy to grasp, keep yourself
adaptable and on the move. Accept the fact that nothing is certain and no
law is fixed. The best way protect yourself is to be as fluid and formless
as water; net bet on stability or lasting order. Everything changes"
If they have not, I recommend that they read the entire book. Formlessness
helped Chairman Mao's Communist group to overwhelm and defeat the Chinese
Nationalists after the end of World War II. Mao's communists controlled
only isolated areas in the countryside, lacked military experience or
training beyond mountain fighting and less sophisticated weaponry. When the
nationalists began to push towards the strongholds of the communists, the
communists dispersed to the "out-of-the-way" corners. Their small units
harassed the Nationalist armies, ambushing them here, retreating
unexpectedly there, but these dispersed units never linked up, making them
hard to attack. They would seize a town only to give it up soon. Infact,
they were never staying in one place; as elusive and formless as ever.
Initially, the nationalists ascribed this to cowardice and inexperience
especially since the communist leader, Mao Tse-tung was more a poet and
philosopher than a military strategician whereas the Nationalist Leader
Chiang Kai-shek studied warfare in the West and was a follower of the German
military writer Carl von Clausewitz. Mao's strategy eventually became
effective as the communists allowed the Nationalists to take over the major
cities and then encircle and capture the Nationalists. The Nationalist
soldiers became terrorised and fell for the Communists.
Knowing that the Nigerian soldiers have been used repeatedly to main and
kill the poor people of the Niger Delta, what strategy will make them think
inward and say "enough is enough" and turn their weapon against their
paymaster to protect the poor citizens of the Delta? Could the MEND strategy
be effective enough to force the Soldiers to have a rethink of their role in
this mission? I guess time will tell.
But, I see a progression in sophistication of the Niger Delta militants.
They get more and more fearless by the day; fear less of death. Are we
breeding the first set of suicide bombers for Nigeria? This is a country
that has no capability to respond to the minutest disaster. The other day,
an international airport in Port-Harcourt watched helplessly as children
burnt to death when a Sosoliso aircraft caught fire. Buildings collapse and
for 48 hours, rescue mission don't arrive. How is Nigeria prepared for the
actions of the first suicide bomber from the Niger Delta? How will Nigeria
respond to a suicide bombing of a refinery, a bank, a tall-building in
Lagos, Abuja or Kaduna by a frustrated and hopeless Niger-Deltan? Why is
Nigeria making the same mistake that many past powers made; same that
Isreal continues to make, the United States made when they entered Iraq and
Afghanistan (and have not been able to come out alive)?
I urge the MEND and other restless Niger Deltan youths and freedom fighters
to take solace in the fact that history is on their side: the South African
apartheid regime eventually lost to the anti-apartheid movement despite the
decades of support they got from world's super powers; the British
occupation of colonies in America (including the USA) and Africa was forced
to end by bloody but persistent resistance;
the peoples revolution in Iran prevailed
over the Shah; the IRA won over the British; though the jury is still out in
Iraq, the opposition has proven to be irrepressible. I believe that victory
for the people of the Niger Delta over the evil of the majority ethnic
groups is certain.
I only hope that common sense will soon prevail over the malady of the
central government and thereby avoid the cells of future suicide bombers
from growing.