My New Black Magazine - NYU Black Renaissance Noire BRN-FALL-206 ISSUE RELEASE | Page 185

Jokolo added that L ———————————————— q5) 2005 “We (Muslims) have been pushed to the wall and it is time to fight…. Obasanjo is trampling on our rights and Muslims must rise and defend their rights. The more we continue to wait, the more we will continue to be marginalized.” — Mustapha Jokolo, quoted in (“Emir’s Jihad Threat” Insider Weekly, May 2, 2005, p.19) L———————————————— 184 For this “fight” [Jihad?] they had to find another military instrument. Hence, presumably, their adoption of Boko Haram and the subsequent enhancement of its terrorist capacity, and the reported sudden affluence of its leader who began to move about in suvs. Was it sheer coincidence that Boko Haram became well-funded and more powerful in mid-2005 [see q30 below] a few months after the Emir of Gwandu called for a fight to end what the Caliphate perceived as its marginalization by the obj Government? Not bloody likely. More on this later in Part Three. While all that was going on, Enahoro, through his Movement for National Reformation (mnr), began, in 1992, to advocate for a Sovereign National Conference (snc) to fundamentally restructure the Nigerian Federation and end the disadvantages of the subjugated non-Caliphate ethnic nationalities. By 2004, the mnr had morphed into pronaco which began campaigning for a constitution to replace the fraudulent 1999 constitution and thereby deprive the Caliphate of its pseudo-democratic instrument of permanent domination and exploitation. The Caliphate did not welcome any of that. When furthermore obj schemed to have his non-Caliphate protégé become President, the Caliphate leaders saw red. obj, in the spirit of the “temporary” handover, had obligingly selected a Caliphate politician to succeed himself in 2007 and return power to his Caliphate patrons, but he deliberately handpicked Umaru Yar’ Adua who was seriously ill, in the hope, perhaps, that he would die in office and be succeeded by his non-Caliphate Vice President, Goodluck Jonathan. Luckily for obj’s scheming, this all came to pass when President Yar’ Adua died in office in 2010. When President Jonathan then failed to relinquish the presidency to them and entered the contest for a full term of his own, as was his constitutional right, Caliphate politicians publicly vowed to make the country ungovernable for him. [see q27, below] And when he won the 2011 election, they kept their promise and unleashed their Boko Haram terrorists on the country. How did Boko Haram arise and become available for this assignment? According to evidence in the book Power, Politics and Death by Olusegun Adeniyi, who was the Special Adviser on Communications (i.e. media spokesperson ) to the late President Yar’ Adua, Boko Haram was a tiny and obscure sect from its founding in 2002 until 2005 when it was apparently adopted by some powerful sponsors. Its leader began to live affluently and the magnitude and sophistication of its terrorist capacity began to build up. So great had this terror capacity grown that in 2012, Boko Haram gave a “quit the North” notice to those the Caliphate leaders had called “invaders” back in 1948 [see q15 below], and enforced the order by bombing churches and funerals, and by other acts of mass murder. But, unfortunately for its Caliphate sponsors, Boko Haram, as its power grew, developed an agenda of its own which threatened the Caliphate’s very survival. [more on that later when we discuss boko haram’s minimal and maximal agenda.] Terror, mass murder and genocide in Caliphate ideology It needs to be emphasized that terror, mass murder and genocide have been political instruments of the Caliphate right from the early 1950s.