Governor  Isa Yuguda of Bauchi State yesterday in Lagos  painted the gloomy  picture  that awaits the country should the Islamic sect, Boko Haram  succeed with its ongoing insurgency.
The  governor, who at a time ,was alleged to be one of the sponsors of the  group, did not only deny the allegation but said: “It would be a tragedy  for any governor to finance the activities of a group that takes  lives.”
He  added: “I do not think any governor would do that. If you are in the  business of politics, you should realise that you will die one day and  God will ask you to account for your deeds in life.”
Governor  Yuguda, who delivered a lecture titled “Nigerian Unity: Marching  Forward to Greatness” at a business luncheon organised by  the Island  Club, said of the Boko Haram insurgency: “Under the weight of the  current Boko Haram insurgency, Nigeria may implode, leading to a general  breakdown of law and order, creating a refugee crisis and escalation of  cross-border crimes and violence. This will ultimately lead to a  gradual collapse of the sub-region.
“Those  beating the drums of war at the slightest tension in the land must know  that breaking up a nation is very hard–as hard as its founding, and  often just as violent.
  “Perhaps with the exception of Czechoslovakia, there is no record of a  country disintegrating into its constituent parts peacefully. They  should save Nigeria having to experience and live through such a great  unknown.
“Nigeria  as it is, has come to stay. The issues that unite Nigerians are more  important and certainly more numerous than the few that divide them.
“In  any event, there will be no winner in such war that these doomsday  prophets are advocating. A free-for-all internecine conflict in Nigeria  will take on the character of several different battles-an  inter-regional, intra-regional religious war between Muslims and  Christians; an ethnic war fueled by pent-up tribal grievances within a  single state or across the boundaries of neighbouring states; an  indigene-settler, farmer-nomad war of attrition and an all-out war  between the haves and the have-nots across the length and breadth of the  country
‘’It  will be a war without a warfront, because the whole country will be the  theatre of battle and every inhabitant a reluctant warrior. And it will  be a general war with an unprecedented number of casualties that, in  addition, will cause large-scale suffering in which several millions of  internally-displaced persons will be rendered homeless and many more  refugees will be forced across Nigeria’s borders into neighbouring  countries.”
On  Boko Haram, the governor said: “As far as I am concerned, the  activities of the group give its members away as animals, and our  society must find a way of dealing with it. Anyone who takes up arms  against the people and the state is nothing but a criminal, whether as  Boko Haram, Niger Delta militants or any other group that might be  fomenting violence.
“The  Boko Haram insurgency is a product of poverty. We Muslims know that the  greatest sin anyone can commit is to take another person’s life. The  sect’s members must have been wrongly indoctrinated to kill in the name  of religion. 
Responding  to a question on speculations that some northern governors are behind  the sect, he said: ”Any governor who has sworn with the Bible or the  Quran is duty-bound to protect lives and property, ensure justice and  equity and provide social amenities. And any one who has not done these  has failed completely.
‘’Therefore,  if there is any governor involved or behind Boko Haram, God will catch  up with him, because human lives are sacred, so no one has the right to  take the lives of fellow human beings.”
 
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