Former President, Goodluck Jonathan, has disclosed that his
administration was able to contain the menace of religious killing by
working with relevant religious stakeholders.
Addressing the United States, US, House Sub-Committee on Africa,
Jonathan revealed that his administration’s political will to halt
impunity in Nigeria led to the localisation of religious extremism in
the Northeast with occasional killings in other zones of the North.
He pointed out that in a bid to contain the spread of religious
killings from the North to the Christian domination south, he personally
reached out to the then President of the Christian Association of
Nigeria, CAN, Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor, whom he asked to appeal to the
Christian community against reprisal attacks.
Jonathan explained further that he also reached out to the “Muslim
Ummah in Nigeria, His Eminence, the Sultan of Sokoto, Sa’ad Abubakar
III,” whom he was able to convince to “publicly condemn Islamic
extremism in Nigeria.”
According to Jonathan, he worked through a body known as the Nigeria
Inter-Religious Council, NIREC, to bring Christian and Muslim leaders
together “so they could talk to each other not at each other.”
Jonathan also highlighted some of his achievements in office to
include, establishment of 12 universities, arrest and prosecution of
Boko Haram bomb blast masterminds among others.
His speech reads in part: “Even before I set up the National
Conference in 2014, my government took certain initiatives to end
impunity and reorient the minds of Nigerians. First was education. I
established twelve conventional Federal Universities and two specialized
universities. Nine of the twelve Federal Universities were located in
those states in Northern Nigeria that previously did not have any
Federal University. The Specialized Police University was located in
Kano state, also in the North, bringing the total number of universities
I established in the North of Nigeria to ten. The Specialized Maritime
University was located in the Niger Delta.
“In addition to these, I also established 165 Almajiri elementary and
high schools in each of the nineteen states of Northern Nigeria to
combine Islamic education with Western education.
“In the area of law enforcement, it was quite challenging, but we
were determined. When the Boko Haram Islamic terrorists bombed St.
Theresa’s Catholic Church, Madalla, in Niger state of Nigeria on
Christmas Day of 2011, I physically visited the scene of the bombing at
which 44 people died on Saturday the 31st of December 2011 and I
promised Nigerians that those responsible for that heinous act would be
brought to book.
“That promise was fulfilled on the 20th of December 2013 when Kabiru
Umar, aka Kabiru Sokoto, was sentenced to life imprisonment after my
administration investigated that crime, identified him as the
mastermind, arrested him and diligently prosecuted him and some of his
associates.
“Might I add that this was the first and only successful prosecution
of a crime of deadly terrorism against a religious place of worship
inspired by religious extremism since Nigeria’s return to civil rule in
1999.
“Before then, my administration had also diligently carried out the
first successful prosecution of terrorists of the Islamic extremist
group, Boko Haram, for another terror attack, but this time not in a
place of worship but on the offices of the Independent National
Electoral Commission also in Madalla, Niger state, an act which led to
the deaths of sixteen persons on April 8th, 2011.
“We were in the process of prosecuting Aminu Ogwuche, the mastermind
of the April 14, 2014 Nyanya bombing in Nasarawa state which killed 75
people but unfortunately that prosecution was ongoing as at the time I
left office in 2015.
“But the point I want to emphasize by citing these incidences is that
my administration had the political will to halt impunity in Nigeria
and that is why killings due to religious extremism was localized to the
Northeast with occasional killings in other zones of the North.
“And even in the Northeast, we had rolled back the Islamic terrorist
sect, Boko Haram, by the end of the first quarter of 2015 after we were
able to get weapons to arm our military.
“The killings did not spread to the mainly Christian south and I
believe that the fight back against impunity by my administration was
the main reason for this.
“Of course, there were other reasons for this. For instance, through
my personal reach out to the then President of the Christian Association
of Nigeria, Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor, I was able to persuade the Body of
Christ in Nigeria not to engage in any retaliation or reprisal killings.
My job was made easier in this regards when the Christian Association
of Nigeria saw a genuine desire on my part to bring religious extremists
to book.
“Using the same approach with the head of the Muslim Ummah in
Nigeria, His Eminence, the Sultan of Sokoto, I was able to get the
mainstream of the Islamic faith to publicly condemn Islamic extremism in
Nigeria. This was important to show that a clampdown on Islamic
extremism was and is not a clampdown on Islam.
“Going a step further, I worked through a body known as the Nigeria
Inter-Religious Council (NIREC) to bring Christian and Muslim leaders
together so they could talk to each other not at each other.”

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