A former top military commander is set to challenge the official story of Nigeria’s long war against Boko Haram. Retired General Lucky Irabor will soon release “Scars: Nigeria’s Journey and the Boko Haram Conundrum,” a book insiders say will force a national rethink on terrorism. Drawing from his direct experience leading the fight, Irabor’s account is being called a rare, unfiltered look inside an insurgency that has defined a generation.
The high-profile book launch in Abuja will draw the nation’s most powerful figures, with President Bola Tinubu and former President Olusegun Obasanjo attending. The choice of reviewer, the outspoken Bishop Matthew Kukah, signals the book’s intent to spark frank discussion on security and justice, moving beyond private military briefings into the public arena.
Spanning over 300 pages, “Scars” does more than recount battles. It traces the political and historical roots of the violence that has gripped Nigeria and its neighbors for over twenty years. The book argues that the conflict, which began in 2002, created a wave of destruction and displacement that military force alone could not stop.
Ultimately, General Irabor’s work is a direct call for change. The book’s organizers confirm it proposes a complete shift in how Nigeria and West Africa confront terrorism. This suggests a powerful critique of past strategies and a push for a new, more effective paradigm to finally heal the nation’s deep-seated scars.