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    Terrorist rehabilitation does not honor soldiers killed by bandits – Lawyer

    Vincent OsuwoBy Vincent OsuwoApril 1, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Terrorist rehabilitation does not honor soldiers killed by bandits - Lawyer
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    Sir Ifeanyi Ejiofor, a human rights lawyer and former lead counsel for the Indigenous People of Biafra, has criticized Nigeria’s security authorities for proposing a “terrorist rehabilitation” amnesty policy, claiming that such an initiative will continue to wound the country’s already battered conscience.

    In a press statement issued on Tuesday, Ejiofor criticized the defense authorities’ recommendation that if any of the violent non-state actors surrender, the state should receive them, rehabilitate them, and eventually reintegrate them into society.

    The lawyer said in a statement titled ‘Musings: Terrorist rehabilitation and a soldier’s blood; The awful loss of my driver’s son—The quiet sorrow of a society that pardons its destruction’ that the rehabilitation and reintegration of such individuals create major legal and moral concerns.

    He went on to say that it is ethically wrong to reintegrate bandits and terrorists into the society they once destroyed.

    He argued that the plan involves not only legal and moral difficulties but also significant existential considerations about justice, communal memory, and society’s value of human life.

    He lamented the death of his driver’s son, a soldier stationed in Katsina State but assassinated by bandits, insisting that while a nation must uphold the ideals of humanity and redemption, such efforts must not undermine the sanctity of justice or diminish the sacrifices of those who risk their lives to protect others.

    The statement read in part, “For many who may not fully grasp what is cloaked beneath the seemingly benign phrase ‘terrorist rehabilitation policy,’ as presently advanced by our security authorities, it may, at first blush, sound humane, even civilized. Yet, beneath that polished veneer lies a troubling paradox, one that continues to wound the conscience of a nation already wearied by grief.

    “In its stark and unvarnished reality, this policy translates into the granting of amnesty to individuals who, in times past, have slaughtered our gallant servicemen, executed defenseless citizens, razed homes to the ground, and plunged entire communities into unspeakable misery.

    “These are not abstract actors in a distant narrative; they are the very architects of sorrow across our land.

    “What the Chief of Defence Staff now proposes, in effect, is that when any of these violent non-state actors surrender, the state should receive them, rehabilitate them, and, in due course, reintegrate them into the very society they once set ablaze. It is a proposition that raises not only legal and moral questions, but also deep existential concerns about justice, memory, and the value we place on human life.

    “I write this morning from a heart weighed down by grief, grief that is no longer theoretical but painfully personal. Yesterday, at about 3pm, tragedy came knocking, not from afar but through a familiar face. It was my driver, Mr. Chinedu. Beyond his role, he is a man of rare decency, whose character has endeared him to my family. He hails from Ezeagu Local Government Area of Enugu State.

    “He called me on the telephone, his voice trembling, faltering under the crushing weight of a grief I had never heard from him before. Deeply alarmed, I asked, as gently as I could, ‘What is the matter, Chinedu?

    “With a trembling voice, he replied, ‘Oga, I just received a message from the Military High Command… my first son, a soldier posted to Katsina, has been killed by bandits. They said his body will be brought home immediately.”

    “…I did all I could to console him. Yet, in that moment of shared sorrow, one haunting truth lingered unspoken: that the very perpetrator of this heinous act, the bandit who murdered his son, may, under the current terrorist rehabilitation policy, one day be welcomed back, rehabilitated, and reintegrated into the same society his victim died defending.

    “That thought is not merely unsettling; it is profoundly disquieting. It is in light of such painful realities that one is compelled to question whether the fight against terrorism, be it from Boko Haram insurgents, jihadist bandits, or other violent groups, can ever be decisively won under a framework that appears to blur the lines between justice and leniency.

    “A nation must, of course, uphold the ideals of humanity and redemption. But it must do so without eroding the sanctity of justice or diminishing the sacrifices of those who stand in harm’s way to protect us. When policies appear to reward impunity, they risk emboldening the very forces they seek to quell.

    “Until there is a firm, principled resolve to confront these threats with clarity, consistency, and a sense of justice that honors the fallen, the war against terror may, regrettably, remain an illusion, an unending mirage on the horizon of our national aspirations,” the statement added.

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