[OPINION] If female suicide bombings continue, should Nigeria ban the veil?
On April 14, 2014, Islamist sect Boko Haram abducted some 276 girls
from their high school in Chibok, Borno State, an incident that brought
the terrorist group an extended global media attention. While more than
50 had escaped, leader of the group Abubakar Shekau said he had married
off the remaining girls. However, recent events suggest that the
Islamist militants might have kept the girls to carry out suicide
attacks.
The group has stepped up its campaign of suicide bombing using girls,
usually veiled, to blow up targets in Nigeria’s northeast. At other
times, the militants storm villages on motorcycles and pick-up vans
shooting indiscriminately at villagers and burning down homes.
An attack, on Monday, by two girls who blew themselves up at a fish
market in Maiduguri, the birthplace of the Islamist sect, led to 30
deaths. Another followed in Yobe State, where a girl believed to be aged
about 12 years blew herself up at a market. Although it could not be
confirmed whether the suicide bombers wore veils, most women in the
region wear veils for cultural and religious reasons. Boko Haram had
exploited this, with several female suicide bombers to have perpetrated
attacks in recent times using their veils to conceal bombs. The terror
group has not claimed responsibility for any of the recent bombings.
Buhari’s vow
During his electioneering campaign, Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari promised
to stop Boko Haram if voted into office. But the country has only
witnessed more attacks since his inauguration. More than 150 people have
been killed in the last three weeks. As part of efforts to end the
militant attacks, the president has met with leaders of Chad, Niger and
Benin Republic and has an invitation to visit Cameroon to discuss how
the neighbours can collaborate to end insurgency. He also moved the
Command and Control Centre of Nigeria’s Defence to Maiduguri and
directed all soldiers manning checkpoints across the country to return
to the barracks to focus on the work they signed up for. But attacks
have continued regardless of the efforts.
Ban the veil?
Boko Haram’s use of female suicide bombers raises two questions. Were
they used so they could conceal bombs under their veils? Or is the sect
playing on the emotions of Nigerians by using girls who may well be the
abducted Chibok girls as the perceived age range suggests? Although
these questions may never be answered, one thing is clear; Nigeria needs
to end Boko Haram’s insurgency as soon as possible.
When suicide bombers wearing veils attacked Chad, Nigeria’s neighbour
and partner in the fight against insurgency, the country banned the use
of the burqa (the full body covering, head to toe) and tinted cars.
After suffering series of attacks by veiled girls, maybe it is high time
the country considered toeing Chad’s path. But it will be a tough call
for President Buhari who may be seen as working against the tenets of
Islam, especially by the northern Muslims who are one of those to have
suffered attacks the most.
Although studies show that the burqa’s true origin is cultural, not religious,
fears that such ban could stoke religious tension in the country may
never make Nigerian authorities regard it as a possible way of fighting
insurgency. There have been several riots between Christians and Muslims
in the country since the 1950s, usually triggered by extreme leaders.
Such leaders still exist in the country.
President Buhari, himself, does not think he is out of options yet. In fact, the president believes the current approach
will end the insurgency. A ban on the burqa is thus unlikely, at least
not anytime soon. But if female suicide bombings continue, should
Nigeria ban the veil?
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Thanks. Amebo Team#
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