By Ochereome Nnanna
The
international human rights outfit, Amnesty International (AI), has engaged the
Nigerian military authorities in a war of wits, accusations and
counter-accusations since our armed forces embraced a full-scale campaign to
overcome the Boko Haram Islamist threat in Northern Nigeria.
The
first sign of tension emerged shortly after former President Goodluck Jonathan,
in January 2014, signed the bill outlawing homosexuality (especially gay
marriage) in Nigeria.
Most Western countries and local and international organisations (such as civil
society groups which they fund) propagating their mostly alien and unacceptable
values in the Third World suddenly became hostile to Nigeria,
particularly the Jonathan regime.
They
directly and indirectly added their voices to the growing anti-Jonathan
opposition, especially those based in the North which were perceived as using
the Boko Haram terrorists as a political tool to oust Jonathan and grab
political power. AI, which had harshly criticised the anti-gay law, descended
heavily on the Nigerian Army. AI was no longer interested in the horrendous
activities of Boko Haram, which were sacking villages and communities,
slaughtering people like animals and carting away women whom they dehumanised
just as they liked.
These
did not matter to AI. Instead, AI beamed its activities on the so-called human
rights of Boko Haram fighters killed or captured during operations. Many
Nigerians saw AI’s slur campaign against the Nigerian Armed Forces as
ill-motivated, hostile and malicious, perhaps due to the anti-gay law. It
seemed to meld with the strange reluctance of the President Barack Obama regime
to recognise Boko Haram as a foreign terrorist outfit, which also manifested in
its refusal to sell arms to Nigeria to prosecute the war on terror.
Obama’s America and its non-state sidekick, the AI,
seemed unwilling to even help Nigeria in coping with our explosive
humanitarian crisis concerning the internally-displaced persons. Rather, their
own headache was the “human rights” of terrorists and the demonisation of our
military. Following the change of government on May 29th 2015, and the
assumption of power by retired Major General Muhammadu Buhari, the mindset and
combat reflexes of our armed forces underwent a sudden psychedelic shift.