The Muslim human rights advocacy group, the Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC), has cautioned President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s planned military intervention in Niger.
Hassan Indabawa, the Chairman of MURIC, Kano State chapter, made this known on Saturday in a statement.
MURIC’s reaction is coming on the heels of Tinubu’s request to the Senate to implement an ECOWAS resolution in Niger.
The group stated that war is not an option in resolving the Niger crisis.
According to MURIC, Niger and Northern Nigeria have unbreakable cultural afflictions; hence, the military would spell doom for both countries.
“Military action should never be an option in solving the problem of change of government in the Niger Republic due to the current and historical relationship between Niger and Nigeria, two brotherly neighbours in West Africa. Relations between the two countries are based on a long shared border and common cultural and historical interactions.”
News360 Info recalls that following a failed diplomatic talk led by ECOWAS, the Niger junta cut ties with Nigeria.
Last Friday, the Senate President, Godswill Akpabio, read Tinubu’s request at the plenary seeking a military intervention in Niger.
However, the request attracted mixed reactions from Nigerians.
On July 26, a military junta replaced Niger’s democratically elected government of President Mohamed Bazoum.
Consequently, ECOWAS, France, and the US called for the return to democracy in the region.