Biafra: United Nations Lends Megaphone to Genocidal Military Dictator Buhari on Tuesday, September 19, 2017
By Bruce Fein, Contributor Constitutional Scholar
The United Nations will live in infamy for lending its
megaphone on Tuesday, September 19, 2017, to Nigeria’s elected military
dictator Muhammadu Buhari.
The Hausa-Fulani Muslim strongman is currently orchestrating
genocide as defined by the Genocide Convention against Nigeria’s 50 million
Igbo people because of their ethnicity and unwavering devotion to Christianity.
Buhari’s genocide marks the culmination of a long train of Biafran subjugation
by radical Hausa-Fulani Islamic terrorists. The dictator’s power is anchored to
an illegitimate constitution decreed by a military dictator in 1999 to hold the
Christian Biafran people in bondage to Hausa-Fulani Muslims. Nigeria’s
constitution has never been approved by Nigerians.
Last June, Buhari tacitly endorsed a Hausa-Fulani threat to
expel by force and violence and to plunder 11 million Igbos in twelve northern
Nigerian states that have adopted Sharia as their legal codes if they did not
abandon their Igbo homes and businesses by October 1, 2017. During the past few
years in northern Nigeria, Hausa-Fulani terrorists have destroyed thousands of
churches and religious schools and displaced millions of Christian Biafrans.
Hundreds of innocent civilians have died and more have been
injured or terrorized by Nigeria’s military acting under Buhari’s direction in
the last week alone. A courageous and influential Biafran leader, Nnamdi Kanu,
has had his home attacked and quarantined by Nigeria’s armed forces and his
followers killed. Grisly videos and photos taken at scenes of the harrowing
crimes are conclusive. What they prove amounts to state terrorism—the
systematic employment of violence to intimidate or coerce a civilian
population.
Instead of providing Buhari a megaphone, the United Nations
should be expelling Nigeria from membership under Article 6 of the United
Nations Charter. The United Nations Security Council (UNSC) should be referring
the dictator and his henchmen like Army Chief of Staff Lt. General Tukur Yusuf
Buratai to the Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, Fatou
Bensouda, to investigate for complicity in genocide. The UNSC should also be
imposing an arms embargo on Nigeria under Chapter VII of the United Nations
Charter until the right of the Biafran people to self-determination is secured
through a free and fair referendum conducted by the United Nations Electoral
Unit. At present, dictator Buhari is diverting arms purchased for ostensible
use against Boko Haram, an international terrorist organization, to the
terrorizing of Biafran Christians. Buhari has no interest in defeating Boko
Haram because its threat triggers military and financial assistance from the
United States in its global war on terrorism.
These sanctions against Nigeria would honor twin objectives
of the United Nations: (1) “to establish conditions under which justice and
respect for the obligations arising from treaties and other sources of
international law can be maintained;” and, (2) “promoting and encouraging
respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms for all without distinction
as to…religion.”
The genocide of Biafrans is not a “domestic” matter within
the exclusive jurisdiction of Nigeria. Genocide is a crime against all of
mankind which concerns every country. Moreover, if dictator Buhari is permitted
to kill and enslave Christian Biafrans with impunity, Nigeria could degenerate
into a Hausa-Fulani Islamic theocracy and could become a state sponsor of
terrorism. Nigeria’s example would embolden the persecution of Christians
elsewhere.
Nigeria’s 190 million inhabitants make it the most populous
nation in Africa. It is a model not only in West Africa but throughout the
continent. It is too important for its fate to be left to the roll of the dice.
The international community planted the seeds of
contemporary Nigerian and African strife by arbitrarily carving up the
continent in favor of colonial powers at the1884-1885 Berlin Conference. The
United Nations is saddled with a moral obligation to help remedy the dystopias
spawned by many of its key members.
While the suffering and persecution of Burma’s Muslim
Rohingya have captured headlines and the attention of the United Nations High
Commissioner on Human Rights, Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein, Nigeria’s far worse
oppression of Biafrans has been largely ignored. It is difficult to resist the
conclusion that the international human rights community squints when blacks
kill blacks.
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