Self-Defence Is A International Human Right, By Atiku Abubakar

What I counsel is that the executive, legislature and judiciary must wake up and smell the coffee. When they do, they will realise that people who have volunteered to provide the internal security that the government has not been able to provide, need encouragement, and more importantly, a legal framework and central support to make their dream of preserving the dignity of human life a reality.

As a nation, our police, armed forces and paramilitary bodies have shown great gallantry, patriotism and dedication to duty. They are our first line of defence against enemies of our nation and saboteurs within our midst. I laud, value and acknowledge them, which is why I awarded scholarships and gave other support to the children of some our fallen heroes.

Having said that, I must add that the reality on the ground in Nigeria today is that our armed and paramilitary forces are overstretched. To deny this is to unpatriotically put their lives at risk. This we must not do. They deserve better from us.

To say that we do not need the services of those who are patriotic enough to voluntarily put their lives at risk to ensure the protection of the lives and property of Nigerians is to deny the obvious.

I salute groups like the Civilian Joint Task Force in the North-East, which provided and continues to provide an invaluable service to Nigeria and her peoples, at great cost to themselves, both in human lives and in productive hours, for which they are not well remunerated. Without their altruistic services, where would the war on terror be?

I also acknowledge and appreciate the work that hunters and vigilantes have done and are still doing to help boost security in states scattered across Nigeria, including in the North-East and Zamfara, Jigawa and Taraba States, to mention a few. Not a few Nigerians are able to sleep with two eyes closed because of the action of these bodies of dedicated and gallant country men.

Nigeria has crossed the rubicon and cannot go back. There is too much insecurity in the land and too much inefficiency from the federal government, leading to wanton and unnecessary loss of lives. It is easy to think that all is well when you are in secure State Houses, but the reality is that the security situation is far from fine for the average Nigerian citizen.

The right to self-defence, including the right to combat terror, is guaranteed by international law, as enshrined in Article 51 of the United Nations Charter, of which Nigeria is a signatory.

In such circumstances, people have an inalienable God given right to self-defence. This divine right, as long as it is limited to protecting the self cannot be declared illegal by man. Not by any stretch of imagination.

What I counsel is that the executive, legislature and judiciary must wake up and smell the coffee. When they do, they will realise that people who have volunteered to provide the internal security that the government has not been able to provide, need encouragement, and more importantly, a legal framework and central support to make their dream of preserving the dignity of human life a reality. Internal security is not a call for secession and we must abandon the paranoia that makes us see it as such. All calls for secession must be quashed by the might of the Nigerian state, no exceptions!

But on the matter of internal security as a means of self-defence, I call on all and sundry to speak up.

The right to self-defence, including the right to combat terror, is guaranteed by international law, as enshrined in Article 51 of the United Nations Charter, of which Nigeria is a signatory.

Therefore, no human power has the authority to criminalise the protection of human life, and no human ambition is worth the failure to speak in support of the people, in order to remain in favour with the oppressors of the people.

Atiku Abubakar, the Waziri of Adamawa, was vice president of Nigeria from 1999 to 2007.

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