Sheikh Gumi
•Cleric should be invited, say retired
capt, lawyer
Bandits terrorising the northern part of
Nigeria last Monday proved right the
claim made months ago by Kaduna-
based Islamic cleric, Sheikh Ahmad
Gumi, that they were acquiring anti-
aircraft missiles to attack the country’s
military fighter jets.
About 154 days after Gumi gave the
intelligence in an exclusive interview
with Sunday PUNCH published on
February 14, bandits in Zamfara State,
on July 18, gunned down a Nigerian Air
Force Alfa Jet flown by Flight Lieutenant
Abayomi Dairo.
The military aircraft perished but the
pilot luckily escaped and survived the
deadly onslaught, according to a July 19
statement by NAF’s Director of Public
Relations and Information, Air
Commodore, Edward Gabkwet.
Gabkwet said, “On July 18, 2021, around
12.45pm, a Nigerian Air Force Alpha Jet
aircraft, returning from a successful air
interdiction mission between the
boundaries of Zamfara and Kaduna
states, came under intense enemy fire,
which led to its crash in Zamfara State.
“Luckily, the gallant pilot of the
aircraft, Flight Lieutenant Abayomi
Dairo, successfully ejected from the
aircraft. Using his survival instincts, the
pilot, who came under intense ground
fire from the bandits, was able to evade
them and sought refuge in nearby
settlements awaiting sunset.”
Sunday PUNCH had in February
interviewed Gumi shortly after his first
well-publicised trip into the Zamfara
forest to hold a parley with the dreaded
bandits.
The cleric, who on return from the
forest began a campaign that the
bandits be granted amnesty by
government, disclosed in the interview
that bandits were responsible for the
growing wave of kidnappings in the
country.
Gumi said, from his interaction with the
bandits, he had gathered that they were
kidnapping and using ransoms collected
to acquire arms, adding that they were
in moves to purchase anti-aircraft
missiles for the purpose of downing
military jets.
He had said, “Most of the kidnappings,
they (the bandits) are doing it to
acquire weapons. They are now trying
to buy missiles, anti-aircraft missiles.
This is already developing into a full-
blown insurgency and we should stop
that. And what we are afraid of is that if
they become religiously radicalised, it
will give rise to another dimension, and
it will be very difficult to control.”
Stressing the point, the cleric added,
“Like I said, they are collecting ransoms
to buy weapons. Look at the herdsmen
in Oyo and southeastern states, they are
not buying skyscrapers or riding
Mercedes; they are still in the bush.
They don’t want money. They want their
cows, not money. They are doing that
(kidnapping) to raise money just to buy
weapons to repel helicopters and
aeroplanes and to attack anybody that
is going to attack them.”
A 2020 report by SB Morgan Intelligence
had stated that, between 2011 and 2020,
at least $18.34m was paid as ransom by
victims of kidnap across the country.
“Overall, Nigeria is becoming less safe
each year. Kidnapping has increased in
almost all states, but the sharpest rise
has been in Kaduna, Rivers, Katsina,
Zamfara and Taraba, while only
Bayelsa, in the entire country, saw a fall
in the number of incidents compared to
the period of 2011 to 2015,” the report
had stated.
While the July 18 attack on Nigerian Air
Force jet proved Gumi right, it is
unclear whether the government or
security forces did anything with the
information months after Gumi
volunteered it.
Bandits’ attacks in northern Nigeria
became worse thereafter, with multiple
unchallenged mass abductions of
students in schools in the region,
indicating that the bandits have become
rather more emboldened.
One of the worst hit northern states is
Kaduna, whose governor, Mallam Nasir
El-Rufai, had openly kicked against
Gumi’s proposed amnesty for bandits.
In the interview with Sunday PUNCH ,
Gumi warned that any governor
opposed to the amnesty should retract
their words to avoid coming under
bandits’ attacks.
Asked whether comments like El-Rufai’s
had the potential of worsening attacks
by bandits, Gumi said, “Such comments
are only exposing the people who make
them to dangers because many of these
bandits became bandits because their
children, their family members, were
killed as collateral damage.
“So, I think it is very important that
such politicians retract their statements
for their own safety because these
bandits are all over the place. They
were profiled and many of the
(military) bombardments have killed
many innocent people, which is true. So,
we have to be careful about what we
say, really, because Nigeria is very
fragile.”
Commenting on the downing of the NAF
plane, Captain Bishop Johnson (retd.),
in a phone interview with our
correspondent on Saturday, said by
now, Gumi ought to have been invited
and questioned by security agencies on
his role in the Monday attack.
Johnson argued that it was even
possible that the bandits got the idea of
acquiring anti-aircraft missiles on
Gumi’s instigation, hence the need for
the cleric to be brought in for
questioning.
According to Johnson, banditry had
become a commercial venture with
beneficiaries at many levels, including
some persons in government.
“Gumi should be a person of interest
and he should be invited to explain his
role. If he said it then and it is
happening now, Gumi should be
invited,” Johnson said.
Sharing Johnson’s view in a separate
interview with Sunday PUNCH , on
Saturday, a human rights activist and
lawyer, Chief Malcolm Omirhobo, said,
“Gumi is supposed to be a guest at the
Department of States Services (office)
all this while and it is very sad that the
DSS has turned a blind eye.
“If you look at the terrorist Act, it
covers people like Gumi – people who
hold meetings with terrorists, people
who negotiate on behalf of terrorists,
and people who solicit on behalf of
terrorists are also terrorists. And the
government has been short of calling
the bandits terrorists but what the
bandits are doing amounts to acts of
terrorism.
“The government has to look at that
terrorist Act; it’s not for fun because it
is surprising that the government has
refused to invite and quiz Gumi – this is
somebody who said he knows where the
bandits are and he goes there with
government officials.”
Omirhobo said the loss of the military
aircraft was lamentable, giving the
country’s state of economy.
“Thank God the pilot survived, but the
government seems not to care about the
loss. Do you know how much the
aircraft costs? But the government is
not concerned. If that thing had
happened in the West or the East, the
entire Nigerian Army would have gone
there. This is discriminatory,” he said.
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