Date Published: 12/28/09
PRESS RELEASE: Mutallab, Detroit Terrorist, Could Have Been Stopped!
New Jersey, United States – The world is surprised that a Nigerian is at
the center of an international terrorist attack, but the Citizens for
Nigeria is not. We warned in August 2009 that the Nigerian government must
move swiftly to fight religious terrorism in the northern part of the
country, in the aftermath of the Boko Haram attack. Any effort by the
Nigerian Federal Government after the failed bombing by Abdul Farouk Umar
Abdulmutallab is too little and too late.
The little value placed on the life of Christians, minorities and ordinary
citizens of northern Nigeria, who had for 30 years been subjected to
unimaginable attacks by intolerant religious fanatics, by the government
and political elite in the north must now be paid for.
While the young Mutallab might not have been a direct product of the
unending wave of fanaticism in northern Nigeria, the religious climate in
which he grew must have aided his current profile as an international
terrorist. The entire northern Nigeria, before Farouk Mutallab was born
until today, is fertile ground for the breeding of religious terrorists.
No fewer than 6,000 innocent citizens were killed when the Maitatsne first
struck in Kano in 1980. Six months ago, about 200 lives were lost from the
Boko Haram terrorism. In between, over the course of three decades,
religious terrorism had become part of life in the north. Farouk Mutallab
is a chronologic but sad reflection of the history of Islamic fanaticism
in Nigeria. He falls right within the historical block.
For far too long, the Federal Government and the northern political elite
have failed to address a serious problem of extremism in that part of the
country, leaving citizens at the mercy of terrorists, who had begun to
gain international affiliation with dangerous groups like Al-Queda. When
Osama Bin Ladin mentioned Nigeria in one of his disgusting threats, the
nation should have been worried. There is no evidence that the government
took any action when it heard that Bin Laden had connections to Nigerian
muslims.
The characteristic failure of action has now led to the hugely
embarrassing and possibly costly linkage of the so-called ‘Nigeria brand’
to international terrorism. Instead of taking action to address important
problems, the government had chosen to embark on expensive and wasteful
advertising programs such as ‘Rebranding Nigeria.’
If action had been taken when Mr. Umaru Mutallab, who is now believed to
be the father of the Detroit terrorist, reported his son to the security
agencies, the Nigerian brand name would have remained only as bad as it
was, not worse. Farouk Mutallab should have been detected and stopped from
leaving Nigeria, in the first instance.
The Citizens for Nigeria admits that the young Mutallab’s case is high
profile and that he seems to have been indoctrinated from England.
However, his fire was likely fuelled from home, and he could have been
stopped.
We salute the courage of Mr. Umaru Mutallab, former chairman of the First
Bank, for reporting suspected activities of his son to the Nigerian and US
authorities. In spite of what anyone may say, it takes extra-ordinary
courage to report your own son for possible crime. In fact, his proactive
effort has reduced significantly the burden of the attack on Nigerians,
who are likely to suffer from the incident. Already, Nigerians in the
United States and the United Kingdom are expressing worries over how they
will be perceived and treated by their host countries in light of the
execution of terrorism by a Nigerian on foreign soil.
Once again, the Nigerian government has failed. The only difference is
that this time, the price is potentially high.
When Nigerians travel or live outside of their country, they will start
paying the price for ineptitude and conspiracy by their government. Even
when they don’t travel, they pay the price when Islamic extremists are
allowed to operate. Someday, when the fanatics are resisted, the whole
nation may explode and the prophecy of a failed state will be fulfilled.
In the report, Global Trends 2025: A Transformed World, by the United
States’ National Intelligence Council, it is clearly stated: “Because of
the encroaching desertification in the north, the religious clash between
Muslims and Christians is heating up. Another Biafra-like civil war - only
this time along North-South lines - is not inconceivable.”
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