BOKO HARAM SHARIA REASONING
Abstract
In the decade since Al-Qaeda, led by the late Osama Bin Laden, attacked
America, there has been a resurgence in the debate about the relationship between
religion and politics. The global Islamic terrorist networks and their successful operations
against various targets around the globe increasingly draw attention to what constitutes
the core values of Islamic extremism: the logic of evangelistic strategy, the import and
relevance of its spiritual message and consideration of the composite view of life that
does not distinguish between sacred and temporal mandates. Suspicions have been
fuelled that Islam is incompatible with modern democratic systems and pluralist
outlooks. The real cause of Islamic militancy is at once universal and particular. The
Nigerian experience of this radical Islamism–Boko Haram–brings home the once
“distant” threat to global peaceful co-existence. While there exist arguments regarding
the raison d’etre and means or methods of the operations of Boko Haram, the end has been
normative; to achieve a purely religious nationalistic system on the basis of the sharia
code of ethics. This paper, therefore, critically analyses the historical and philosophical
interpretations of Islamic history constructed as an infallible corpus, and how it has been
impacted by the democratic vision in Nigeria. It concludes with a consideration of the
possibility and practicability of a liberal system at once free and religious in a pluralist
and global society.