No one ever lacks a good reason for suicide. – Cesare Paverse
Until
June 16, 2011 suicide bombing was a distant phenomena few ever thought
could occur in this realm. The harsh economic climate and heated
geo-political space notwithstanding, it is very rare to see Nigerians, a
people widely adjudged as the happiest on the face of the earth, take
their own lives. It was even more unimaginable that someday, a Nigerian
irrespective of whatever influence, will devise violent and extreme
actions capable of brutally terminating his life, and extending the same
deadly gestures to those around him.
So
when Umaru Abdulmutallab, a 22-year-old Nigerian from an affluent
background attempted to become the country’s first suicide bomber on a US-bound flight on Christmas Day 2009, many among his compatriots questioned his nationality, others his sanity.
Nigerians can’t be suicide bombers, it was reiterated.
Then
the dreaded happened. Mohammed Manga, a 35-year-old Nigerian male,
signed his name in the most gory of inks as the first suicide bomber
ever to strike in the country. A recruit of extremist Islamic sect Boko
Haram, Manga blew himself up in front of Nigeria’s police headquarters
in Abuja, two and half years after Mutallab’s first unsuccessful attempt
to set the record aboard the American airliner.
Here comes the multimillion dollar question, what could make a Nigerian volunteer to be a suicide bomber?
Could
it be the prevailing unemployment situation in the country which has
made the teeming able-bodied youths roaming the northern part of the
country a potential breed for terror recruiters? Maybe it is the lure of
a few thousand dollars that make potential volunteers throw reasons to
the winds and get blown up. Perhaps it is in the hatred indoctrinated
into these would-be suicide bombers by extremist Islamic preachers at an
early age.
Like
his counterparts in Arabia or elsewhere around the world, research has
proven that money, education or the lack of both, is not a determinant
factor that would either motivate or hinder a would be Nigerian suicide
bomber. If it will be recalled, Abdulmutallab was from an illustrious
home and had the best education money could offer. Mohammed Manga on the
other hand was described as a fairly successful businessman.
In Robert Lamb’s How Suicide Bombers Work, both
the glamorization of martyrdom and its establishment as a gateway to
rewards in the afterlife are central, yet universal factors in the
suicide bomber equation.
The
glamorization of matyrdom is appealing to the often young and naive
Nigerian suicide bomber, whose average age bracket is put between 18 –
24. For this set of people, the thoughts that his name becomes immortal is overwhelming. The
pride, prospect and glamour at the ‘sense of a holy mission’ is
appealing, and this sadly, is a bait their manipulative handlers exploit
to the fullest.
‘A gateway to
rewards in the afterlife’ should not be ruled out as a motivating
factor for the Nigerian suicide bomber. The thoughts of seventy-two
virgins for martyrs who paid the supreme price for fighting Allah’s cause is too strong to be relegated to the background. Likewise are the quests to avenge perceived political tyranny and economic imbalances.
So how does the Nigerian suicide bomber justify the killings of innocent souls? Israeli psychologists eager to understand the mindset of militant Islamic extremists postulate
that at this point in the mindset of the suicide bomber, no one perhaps
except for members of his sect is innocent. He is not about killing the
innocent, he is killing the enemy.
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