Sokoto, Zamfara and WAEC

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This story should concern every Nigerian all over the world. The Almajiri system in Northern Nigeria is and has been producing a generation of disenfranchised young men who have nothing to lose. One of my unclassified work as an Intelligence Analyst in the United States Army was to answer the question who are the Boko Haram fighters and what was fueling the insurgency in Nigeria? I painted a profile of the Boko Haram fighters and other actors responsible for the challenges facing Nigeria’s security architecture like the Hausa-fulani herdsmen.

A common denominor in Nigeria security challenge are the Almajiri. The Almajiris, by definition, are orphaned and other abandoned children usually left in the care and tutelage of moslem clerics and imams. But in practice the children are left to take of themselves through the solicitation of alms and street begging and in most cases even the imams who are supposed to care for them . It is only in duch setting that you see a sea of young people just roaming the streets and begging for money. Soon they graduate from street begging to street urchins, then to armed robbers , kidnappers, bandits and terrorists. It has been argued logically that they are the Boko Haram fighters with few hardened global religious fanatics and jihadists from the war in Libya and chad. The wars in the Sahel coupled with Nigeria’s no-border policy (porous borders) have meant that as Libya fractured, thousands of escaping moslem terrorists and jihadists were said to have found home in Nigeria’s sambiza forests with Boko Haram terrorists. The war in chad have also long brought this cross-border migration of criminals and social miscreants fueling the security challenge. Many Nigerian villages, towns and cities would wake up to see strange looking foreigners reportedly setting up tents with AK-47 machine guns. Not long they would start witnessing all kinds of heinous crimes ranging from rape of innocent women and children in the farms, killing of farmers, kidnapping on our roads for ramsome, hitherto very strange occurrence in Nigeria’s culture and value system.

According to some accounts, the Almajiris are believed to be the Hausa-Fulani herdsmen killing and maiming thousands in various parts of the country. Thus, tackling terrorism, banditry and Boko Haram insurgency in Nigeria requires more than the now yearly huge financial and budgetary allocations to Security ( so-called security votes) to dedicated pursuit of education for the huge swathe of disenfranchised young people called Almajiris in states n Northern Nigeria. Unfortunately, governors of these Northern states like Sokoto and Zamfara and others are not making the best efforts to address this challenge. Imagine states of the federation who receive monthly federal allocationn do not have students graduating from elementary and secondary school to qualify them to take WAEC examination. Almajiri system is producing young people who have nothing to loose in society. Thus they also have nothing to gain nor to contribute to the country but to torment their fellow countrymen as they grow up with no life skills to earn a legitimate living.They become ready tools willing to serve as the foot Soldiers of Boko Haram, and the Fulani headsmen causing mayhem across Nigeria. It would take more than the normal politics or our usual unproductive rhetorics to pull Nigeria from the brinks of this security quagmire. It would require new thinking, great courage and determination to shake up the status quo.

NB; Kingsley Dike, a former Foreign Affairs Reporter with The Guardian Newspapers and retired United States Army Intelligence Analyst wrote from Atlanta, Georgia, USA.

Kingsley Dike
Kingsley Dikehttps://newdiplomatng.com/
At The New Diplomat, we stand for ethical journalism, press freedom, accountable Republic, and gender equity. That is why at The New Diplomat, we are committed to speaking truth to power, fostering a robust community of responsible journalism, and using high-quality polls, data, and surveys to engage the public with compelling narratives about political, business, socio-economic, environmental, and situational dynamics in Nigeria, Africa, and globally.

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