Nigeria; a Classic case of Africa learning nothing from history

By Ken Agala (Edited for use)

“it’s unfortunate that while Rwanda has risen from the ashes of their grave errors to say ‘never again,’ Nigeria, led by its present crop of political elites under President Muhammadu Buhari is still dancing around the precipice of an ethnic instigated insurrection.

You might have read several literatures about the Rwanda 1990 genocide, but a visit to the Kigali memorial will knock you off your feet and teach you that long time hatred and propaganda can turn humans into little bits of satan the devil. It will immediately bring you out of any ethnicity and usher you into the race of humanity.
In this article are few examples that might help leaders of African nations walking towards the hell Rwandans has escaped from to unanimously cry “Never Again” on the 7th of every April as Africa’s acclaimed giant Nigeria is about to repeat the same sordid history under its ethnic skewed administration of President Mohammad Buhari. Nearly one million Rwandans, mostly ethnic Tutsi, were massacred by Hutu militia and government forces over a period of just 100 days. This occurred despite the existence of the Genocide Convention of 1948, which makes it a crime to commit genocide.

President Buhari on a site tour of Nigerian solders at battle front Kaduna

The remake of Lucien Kabuga in Nigeria

“In May 2020, Lucien Kabuga, an 86 years old Rwandan fugitive was captured in France. Kabuga had been a fugitive for 26 years. He had been sought by Interpol, FBI, the international crimes tribunal, the Rwanda government and an international union of bounty hunters. Two years earlier, the US state department had placed a 5 million dollars reward on his head.

Kabuga is being tried for crimes against humanity because of the role he played in the Rwandan genocide. However, Kabuga might not have lifted a machete or hoe in the horror of Rwanda, but as one one of Rwanda’s richest men, Kabuga’s radio station RTLM, led the propaganda that daily fed hate to his fellow ethnic Hutus, acting as a catalyst for the Rwanda Genocide in a manner not far-fetched to the crop of present Nigerian political elites of the Northern stock led by President Muhammadu Buhari against Southern Nigerians.
The two major items on the hands of the Interahamwe, the Hutu killer militia, was always a small transistor radio and a machete. While the radios guided the killer gangs around the country, identifying Tutsis, over 500,000 machetes imported into the country by Kabuga and a few Hutu elites, chopped down ethnic Tutsis and moderate Hutus like a bunch of trees.

The scary reality of eradicating History from Nigerian school curriculum

the Hutus and Tutsi are the same people. Same culture, same language and same ethnic group. The only thing that separated them was that the Hutus were farmers while the Tutsis were cattle herders.

Visiting the Kigali Genocide Memorial is such an introspecting experience which I think every African statesman, politician or aspiring leader should have.

The Kigali genocide memorial, is actually the burial site of 250,000 people. It was built to honour the dead, preserve the history of the genocide against the tutsis and is seen as a symbol of ‘NEVER AGAIN’.

If you want to imagine 250,000 dead bodies, just imagine seeing 10 corpses lying dead. Then imagine 50,100, then 1000, then 250,000. If you lie them down side by side on a football pitch to fill every space on a pitch, you will need the space of 60 football pitches to lay the dead.

This burial site is just one of the various burial sites in Rwanda that served as permanent resting places for the remains of the victims of the genocide.

When I experienced the Kigali Genocide memorial with a group of friends in 2016, one thing we noticed was that, we couldn’t talk for almost 10 minutes when we walked out of the memorial through the exit. The experience actually leaves you speechless.

The children’s memorial had intimate details and life size photographs of the deceased children, their names, favourite toys, their schools, the manner in which they were killed, then some of their dead small skulls lying beside a few of their belongings.

As you walk through the labyrinth of history with the informative audio and virtual reality gadgets, you will hear the stories, the recorded cries of victims begging not to be killed, tales from survivors, while the entire maze is filled with relics of the genocide, from one-foot shoes of running victims to their cracked skulls at times with the killer weapons still embedded right through the skull.

I’m sure many people do not know that the Hutus and Tutsi are the same people. Same culture, same language and same ethnic group. The only thing that separated them was that the Hutus were farmers while the Tutsis were cattle herders. This was the major basis which the Belgians used in differentiating them and issuing them with identify cards.

How come hatred grew so much that they managed to break world record for the fastest and most effective killing in human history?

Of all the deaths that occurred during America’s wars from 1990 (Operation Desert storm) to 2018
(War against ISIS), including all the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and over 70 countries where the USA fought their war on terror, with the most effective military hardware, over a 28 year period. Military historians put the total deaths, including civilian and military casualties to about 500,000.

The Atomic bombs that dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki recorded about 200,000 deaths which the entire world still considers as most horrendous. But ethnic Hutus managed to effectively kill one million of their Tutsi brothers and moderate Hutus in less than 100 days.

The kill rate must have been like 10,000 per day.
Not with any weapons of mass destruction, no tanks, no air crafts or sub machine hellfire guns, but with machetes, hoes, stone’s and any make shift that can be turned into a killing instrument. This is how powerful hate can be.

For hundred days, the Hutu propaganda radios kept shouting that the graves are not full enough, urging on the killings of the Tutsis whom they referred to as Cockroaches.

Ironically the Hutus make up about 85% of the country, they had the Presidency and other key offices then, but somehow, they kept believing and spreading stories that these cow herders were going to conquer them.
The fear was so morbid that every Tutsi, including a woman or child was seen as an enemy and potential conqueror.

Asked if she was Hutu or Tutsi, a Rwandese friends eyes popped open with shock and her voice became low as if afraid. “We are all Rwandans, we don’t have Hutu or Tutsi. We don’t talk about it and we don’t know it”

Rwanda; the dream of a Rising Africa

While African giants like Nigeria is still struggling with generators, Rwanda is extracting Methane Gas under water from Lake Kivu and turning it into Electricity.

Rising out of that ashes of death and hate, Rwanda today is the pride of Africa and Nigeria can do the same. Crime rate is almost zero and the city is the cleanest in Africa. While other African countries are still varying files in government offices, Rwanda is using drones to deliver medicine to rural areas.

While neighboring Congo and Burundi are still ruled by who owns more AK47s, Rwandese are coming out monthly alongside their President, legislatures and all government officials to do Umuganda, a community works exercise where everyone is entitled to physically work for their environment.

While African giants like Nigeria is still struggling with generators, Rwanda is extracting Methane Gas under water from Lake Kivu and turning it into Electricity.
While we are still carrying dusty files in our civil service and bribing public servants, Rwanda has implemented full technology where you can go online and do every public service needed, leading the Smart Africa alliance and of course this has led them to the top, in ease of doing business in Africa.

Nigeria; a Classic case of Africa learning nothing from history

Nigerians are still pigeon holed according to their ethnicity or the god they worship. We are still hearing irresponsible infantile statements like ‘all Igbo should leave the North and all Fulani should leave the West’

But ironically, we have a similar history with Rwanda, with the result looking like the opposite.
In the early hours of 15th January 1966, a young Kaduna born Major of Igbo parenthood, led some officers to kill over 20 people which included the then Prime Minister of Nigeria in an attempted coup.

The events of this action led to a vicious pogrom against many innocent Igbos whose crime was that they were from the same ethnicity as the parents of the coup leader.

The pogroms and resultant rebellion by south east leaders led to a vicious 30 month unnecessary and vicious civil war which killed millions of Nigeria and destroyed lots of properties.

Looking back now, one can just imagine how irresponsible and immature the leaders of that era were, not to have prevented that war. They were like little kids with expensive toys. That was how leadership was to them.

But in both scenarios, profiling played a dangerous role, and it’s unfortunate that while Rwanda has risen from the ashes of that stupidity to say never again, Nigeria is still dancing around the precipice of an ethnic instigated insurrection.

Nigerians are still pigeon holed according to their ethnicity or the god they worship. We are still hearing irresponsible infantile statements like ‘all Igbo should leave the North and all Fulani should leave the West’.

Nigeria is not only in dire need of the leadership to provide critical infrastructure, but a leadership that will belong to everyone and belong to no one. A leadership whose body language and actions

Ethnic and Religious profiling is still on the rise, and it’s unfortunate to hear leading religious leaders like Sheik Gumi come out to class Muslim soldiers as non-criminals while the non muslims are responsible for what he calls ‘criminality ‘against bandits. (I still don’t understand how a soldier commits a crime against a bandit)

Nigeria is not only in dire need of the leadership to provide critical infrastructure, but a leadership that will belong to everyone and belong to no one. A leadership whose body language and actions will be free of nepotism and division. A leadership that will diffuse the gunpowder which the country is sitting upon”







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