Saturday, October 4, 2025 - Former President Goodluck Jonathan has said that the Boko Haram insurgency remains one of the most complex and enduring security challenges in Nigeria’s history, warning that military action alone cannot end the crisis.
Jonathan stated this on Thursday, October 2, 2025 in Abuja at
the public presentation of Scars: Nigeria’s Journey and the Boko Haram
Conundrum, authored by former Chief of Defence Staff, Gen. Lucky Irabor
(rtd).
He said that unlike previous crises in Nigeria such as the
Niger Delta militancy and ethno-religious violence, the Boko Haram insurgency
carried deeper scars because of its external connections, extremist ideology,
and advanced weaponry.
"Boko Haram is more complex than what many people
imagine. At some point, their fighters had more ammunition than our soldiers,
which clearly showed that external groups were deeply involved,” Jonathan
said.
The former President noted that the abduction of the Chibok
schoolgirls in 2014 remained one of the most painful scars of his
administration, stressing that no form of cosmetic remedy could erase it from
the nation’s collective memory.
He recalled his personal engagement with Niger Delta
militants as Vice President, saying that his decision to personally visit their
camps without armed escorts was borne out of the conviction that dialogue must
complement military action.
"In the Niger Delta, I met the militants in their camps.
We succeeded in restoring peace not only because of military action but because
we engaged them, listened to them, and created opportunities for their
communities. That approach worked,” he said.
Jonathan, however, emphasized that Boko Haram presented a
different challenge. According to him, the insurgency must be tackled through a
holistic strategy that combines security operations with good governance,
poverty reduction, youth empowerment, and social justice.
“We cannot treat Boko Haram simply as a law-and-order
problem. It is rooted in poverty, exclusion, and broken dreams. Only a
comprehensive approach will deliver lasting peace.”
According to him, Nigeria must adopt a similar approach to
Boko Haram by tackling poverty, unemployment, and social exclusion in
communities vulnerable to extremist recruitment.
He
commended Gen. Irabor for documenting his reflections, saying the book would
enrich national understanding of insurgency and guide future leaders in shaping
policy responses.
"Those
who were directly involved must tell their stories. This book will help the
nation understand what really happened, what lessons we must learn, and how we
can do better in the future,” he added.
The
event attracted dignitaries including Bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Sokoto,
Rev. Mathew Hassan Kukah, former President Olusegun Obasanjo, former National
Security Adviser Maj.-Gen. Babagana Monguno (rtd.), service chiefs, ministers,
members of the diplomatic corps, and traditional rulers.

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