Nigeria: Planned Protest Will Trigger Mother of All Hungers - MURIC

MURIC asks Nigerians to avoid the protest, saying the Nigerian government is ready to listen

As Nigeria braces up for the looming hunger protest, the Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) has warned the organisers of the protest that what they call hunger protest is an invitation to the Mother of All Hungers.

The group implored the organisers to toe the path of patience and dialogue.

MURIC's position was made known in a statement Tuesday by its Executive Director, Ishaq Akintola, a professor.

"Nigerian youths backed by major opposition figures are poised to begin what they describe as hunger protest in the next 48 hours," the MURIC director said. "The whole country is agitated and the fear of the unknown hangs above our heads like the sword of Damocles. Nigeria holds its breath and trembles.

"Although we have spoken out before on the need to tread softly, we find it necessary to reiterate our position as the hour draws nearer. In particular, it has become mandatory to draw our warning from the 'hunger' label given to the proposed protest. We warn clearly, categorically and emphatically that what the organisers call hunger protest is an invitation to the Mother of All Hungers.

"Instead of unleashing anger on the government and its paraphernalia, the organisers should engage the government in dialogue bearing in mind the consequences of violent protests around the world.

"Two other things that should be considered are the fact that inflation is global and hunger is common around the world. Nigeria is affected because we are not an island. The second consideration is the antiquity of hardship in Nigeria. Poverty and hard times have always been major concern of Nigerians from time immemorial. It is therefore too hasty and unfair to hang it all on a regime that is barely one year old.

"We call attention to the crises in countries like Libya and Sudan where ordinary protests snowballed into civil war. They are yet to settle down. The ten days from August 1st to 10th which the organisers of the hunger protest have called for may take Nigeria to ten years of hunger if calls for restraint are ignored. Nigeria may be on the threshold of Mother of All Hungers.

"This is why we appeal to the organisers to simmer down and give dialogue a chance. The worst families are those who bottle up all their grievances until everything explodes. It is always better to jaw-jaw than to war-war.

"The Holy Prophet Muhammad (SAW) said, 'The beginning of anger is madness but its end is regret' (Awwalul gadab junuunun wa aakhiruhu nadamun). Kenyans are already regretting the massive destruction that followed their demonstration against President Ruto as thousands of businesses have been ruined and millions become jobless.

"Regrettably, our education system has concentrated on attractive courses that can fetch graduates quick money and societal status. Our bankers and accountants are countless while our lawyers are numerous. But our farmlands are desolate as our youths are in urban centers. Years of insecurity have chased farmers away from the farms. Nigeria is presently at the edge of the precipice of hunger. Just one push and we will tilt to the abyss of Mother of All Hungers.

"MURIC charges Nigerians to avoid such a catastrophe. The Nigerian government has signalled its readiness to listen. Anarchy hardly results in understanding and brotherhood. But while wars end at conference tables at the end of the day, destroyed infrastructure takes decades to rebuild. 48 hours to D-Day is not too late. Let us strike while the iron is still hot. We can bend a sappling, no one can bend a full-grown tree."

AllAfrica publishes around 500 reports a day from more than 100 news organizations and over 500 other institutions and individuals, representing a diversity of positions on every topic. We publish news and views ranging from vigorous opponents of governments to government publications and spokespersons. Publishers named above each report are responsible for their own content, which AllAfrica does not have the legal right to edit or correct.

Articles and commentaries that identify allAfrica.com as the publisher are produced or commissioned by AllAfrica. To address comments or complaints, please Contact us.