COVER
Ahmad
Salkida, a former journalist with the Daily Trust, was with the Boko
Haram sect from inception and had a close relationship with the sect’s
founder, Mohammed Yusuf. Accused of being a Boko Haram accomplice,
Salkida was detained and almost got killed in the clash between the Boko
Haram and security agencies in 2009 during which the sect leader was
captured and later killed in police custody. This article written in
2009 by Salkida, who is now believed to be on exile, gave an insight
into the evolution of the Boko Haram group. He also made reference to
Abubakar Shekau who later emerged the sect’s leader after Yusuf.
I
have closely followed the activities of the Boko Haram sect. In fact, I
was invited by the late Mohammed Yusuf at that period to establish and
head an Al-mizzan styled newspaper for him. However, in the course of
our deliberations, I tabled the following issues that set us apart: I
wanted to be partner in the project. I wanted editorial freedom to edit
out anything I may find inciting the public in the publication and I
wanted to introduce a regular column that totally disagrees with his
ideology.
I think my conditions, at a time when I hadn’t any
gainful employment, shocked the prospective investor who thought any
budding journalist would rush at the opportunity to become an
editor-in-chief especially of a promising paper, on account of the large
followership and the group’s loyalty to their Imam.
However, my
relationship with the late Mohammed Yusuf continued as he visited me
when I lost my eight-month-old son who died of malaria. Perhaps, he saw
me partially as one of his students and partially as a dissenter due to
my independent disposition. But to be fair to him, I admire his depth of
knowledge, oratorical prowess and apparent willingness to emulate
Prophet Muhammad (SAW).
In early 2002, Yusuf was seen by many as a
likely heir to the renowned the late Sheikh Ja’afar Mahmud Adam in
Maiduguri on account of his brilliance and closeness to the late
renowned scholar. But all that changed shortly when one late Mohammed
Alli approached the late Yusuf with reasons to boycott democracy, civil
service and western oriented schools. The late Yusuf then disengaged
his service with the Yobe State Government.
Then, in a 2006
press release signed by the sect’s Shura (Consultative) Council, they
stated that Islam permits them to subsist under a modern government like
Nigeria but has explicitly prohibited them from joining or supporting
such governments in so far as their systems, structures and institutions
contain elements contradictory to core Islamic principles and beliefs.
The
Alli argued that the sect must embark on Hijra (migration), but Yusuf
declined and Alli proceeded to Kanamma in Yobe with his faction, and
one thing led to another. The group launched an insurgent attack on the
police that resulted in the loss of many lives and property in Kanamma
and later in Gwoza in Borno State. The insurgents, a renegade group that
called itself ‘Taliban’, led by Alli, fiercely disagreed with the late
Yusuf and many of the escapees later returned to Yusuf.
Unlike
Alli, Yusuf went on undeterred, though he was prevented from preaching
in several mosques and was denied TV/radio appearances in the state. But
he set up a preaching outlet in the front of his house at the railway
quarters and at Angwan Doki, Millionaires’ Quarters among others. The
demand for his tapes increased by the day all over the North and the
proceeds therefrom increased tremendously. He then asked his landlord
and in-law, the late Baba Fugu Mohammed to allow him to build a mosque,
which he named Ibn Taimiyya Masjid.
It was in Ibn Taimiyya
Masjid that the late Yusuf, together with his hard-line top lieutenant,
Abubakar Shekau alias ‘Darul Tauhid,’ began to build an imaginary state
within a state. Together they set up Laginas (departments). They had a
cabinet, the Shura, the Hisbah, the brigade of guards, a military wing,
a large farm, an effective micro finance scheme, and the late Yusuf
played the role of a judge in settling disputes. Each state had an Amir
(leader) including Amirs in Chad and Niger that gave accounts of their
stewardship to Yusuf directly.
The sect led by Yusuf took
advantage of the poor quality of our educational system, the incessant
strikes, cult activities, widespread malpractice and prostitution that
is made worse with no offer of jobs after graduation to wheedle many
youth to abandon school and embrace Yusuf’s new and emerging state that
promises to offer them a better alternative.
The late Yusuf also
took advantage of the irresponsible leadership at all levels of
government with unemployment, poverty, corruption and insecurity
becoming the order of the day. And as he points out such failures,
citing verses of the Qur’an and the sayings of the Prophet, the youth
see him as the leader that will indeed deliver them from malevolence to
the Promised Land.
In my write-up of February 28, 2009 in the
Sunday Trust I wrote about the sect, where I alerted the general public
about the sect’s total disregard for civil obedience. The report in
question warned that to disregard the simmering cauldron “smells like
rebellion…and it will be irresponsible of any authority to wait for the
occurrence of violence before it acts in the face of impending threat
to law and order.” In subsequent reports and during my interactions with
senior security agents, I did not only predict the crisis but hinted on
the strategy of the sect. But typical of investigative journalism,
instead of these revelations to catch the attention of the relevant
agencies, their attention was shifted on how to frame me. Apparently,
the plan was never to prevent a crisis but to allow it to occur.
However,
in fairness to the government of Borno State that is living witness to
the unruly behaviour of the sect and its extreme dislike for government
institutions, the state government like other governments in northern
Nigeria saw the need to halt this nuisance in their states. They were
alarmed that the sect that started with a handful of people is hitting
the 7-digit mark and one day (if not very soon) the likelihood that the
sect may determine the politics of the land cannot be dismissed.
According
to Isa Yuguda, the Governor of Bauchi state in a recent interview with
a weekly newspaper, “When the Boko Haram issue came, I sat down and
scientifically organised a commando raid on their stronghold. We
identified them over a period of time and made sure the Ulamas came and
preached against them for two weeks and they in return issued fatwa
against the Imams that were preaching against them. We had to attach
policemen to the Imams because the Boko Haram people threatened to
slaughter them. We planned for them.
“We cordoned off their area
around 3a.m. in the morning and phoned my neighbours in Borno and Yobe
states about the operation I was going to carry out because their leader
was there at that time. After exchanging gunshots for sometime, we
smoked them out of their houses. They were fully armed with grenades,
machine guns and rocket launchers,” said Yuguda.
Having kept
track of political activities in the state, I knew very well that (the
then Borno State Governor) Ali Sheriff, unlike Yuguda, could not afford
to strike first, Borno could take anything from him but not an attack
on Muslims. However, the government in Borno set up a joint security
patrol nicknamed, ‘Operation Flush’ to serve as a constant check on the
sect.
As the crisis started in Maiduguri, reporters did the
obvious; ‘live and tell the story’ and they stayed mostly in the
Government House (GH) and most of them contacted me directly or
indirectly to get briefed because I chose to do the ‘unexpected’, which
is to ‘risk my life to tell the story.’ Indeed, I took undue risk, which
exposed me to the unimaginable that would form the subject of a book I
am now writing.
On Tuesday 29th July 2009 when I made a stop at
the Borno State Government House, a staff of the GH, one Yusuf dragged
me into the office of the Chief Security Officer to the Governor,
insisting that the governor’s aide wanted to see my face for the first
time. The aide wanted to know from me why I did not shave my beard and
lower my trousers below the ankle to avoid the wrath (Alas! bullets) of
the security agents.
I, then, told him that it is wrong for
security agents to brand innocent people that wear beards as Boko Haram
and even kill them based on that. In fact, to keep beards, to wear
turbans and nisfusaak (trousers above the ankle) are part of the
prophet’s Sirah, which was recommended to every Muslim over 1400 years
ago, and it is seen as a deeply spiritual task by many Muslims all over
the world.
He, also, asked me whether or not I was abducted by
the sect members for a while and released. I put the record straight
that, I only ran into a mob and thereafter I was let off the hook when
they were convinced that the brown apron I was wearing that carried an
inscription of Daily Trust had nothing to show that I was a government
official.
Sadly for me, the CSO did not like my guts and the fact
that I reported the two sides that clearly exposed the Achilles’ heel
of his boss. He ordered for my arrest, calling my crime ‘counter
intelligence.’ At the GH I was assaulted by the mobile police (at the
quarter guard post). There, a Police Constable Sani Abubakar, held my
beards and pulled me to the ground, he kicked my legs to forcefully
remove my loafers.
I was made to lie down with my face down.
Instantly I urinated in my pants when two mobile policemen contemplated
who was going to pull the trigger.
I was then driven to the
police headquarters in the state where I was kept in a cell with 58
others. After spending 30 hours in the cell and about 48 hours without
food or water (because, I couldn’t break the fast I was observing upon
my arrest), I was then allowed to wash up the urine that had dried up on
my pants and relieved myself of the running stomach that became the
audible music in our cell as everyone witnessed how cell mates were
being called out waiting for his turn.and executed. Everyone was
Surprisingly, none of my colleagues investigated and reported the
assault against me, even when some of them searched for me in the
crowded cell as I sat without shoes on the floor. Instead, speculations
were rife amongst them that indeed I was a Boko Haram member, on account
of the following baseless talk: That I wear beards and trousers above
my ankle and yet I came from a Christian background and this, to many of
them, makes me an extremist. That I was doing fairly well as a
journalist in the last ten years with a mere primary school certificate
and that makes me a Boko Haram too. That my fair complexioned spouse was
a Shuwa Arab and given out to me in marriage by the late Yusuf and
finally, they said the late Yusuf had contacted some members of the
media on two occasions through me in the past.
Now that I no
longer carry my youthful goatee and halfway trousers to avoid being
branded a terrorist meets your requirements. However, I want to state
here that I am proud of my Christian background as a Muslim because it
has afforded me a unique sense of tolerance and impartial view for the
need for dialogue that many born Christians and Muslims lack, leading to
the kind of mistrusts we see today.
My wife is a very proud
Tarok, from Langtang LGA in Plateau state. I met and married her in
Abuja in 2002 and never saw Yusuf in her life. Yes, I was perhaps the
only journalist known to the late Yusuf on account of what I mentioned
earlier on. But, when has it become illegal to know a public figure who
later became a criminal?
I started a career in journalism as a
staff reporter with Insider Weekly Magazine, from 2001 to 2002.
Thereafter, I had a stint with Crystal Magazine as a Special Projects
Editor and later a founding staff with New Sentinel and freelanced for
several media. Currently, I work as a reporter with the Media Trust
Limited. I do not posses any formal educational qualification beyond
primary school. However, I was self educated through years of extensive
reading of books.
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