Tag: amnesty

  • Planned amnesty for Boko Haram

    Planned amnesty for Boko Haram

    If all goes well, President Goodluck Jonathan will shortly grant the Boko Haram insurgents a general amnesty. That is the gist of press speculation on the insurgents in recent weeks. The federal authorities have neither denied nor confirmed these press reports. The Federal Government was even reported as setting up a technical committee to work out the legal modalities for the planned amnesty, and that it expected that within weeks an agreement on amnesty could be reached with the Boko Haram insurgents. But there are still some hurdles to clear before any amnesty can be granted the insurgents. President Jonathan will need to be satisfied that this is not a hoax, and that the insurgents are serious this time about laying down their arms after nearly ten years of a bloody insurgency that has led to heavy civilian casualties on both sides of the conflict

    It should not come as a surprise that the Federal Government is considering a general amnesty for the insurgents. Such a possibility was never ruled out in the first place by President Jonathan. The Federal Government had always made it clear that it was ready to engage the Boko Haram leaders in a dialogue to end the bloody violence in some parts of the North that has claimed hundreds of lives. Some contacts were in fact made last year with the leaders of the sect, but these preliminary talks to end the conflict were abruptly cut off by the insurgents which may have broken into factions. If, collectively, they are now willing to embrace dialogue with the federal authorities and stop the bloody conflict, then there is a compelling need for the Federal Government to seriously consider this alternative to a military option that has simply not worked. Though battered and mostly on the run, the insurgents have stood their ground and have continued to maim and kill innocent civilians, including women and children in the North. Most of these casualties are Christians who are increasingly being prevented from going to their churches.

    A broad consensus in support of a possible peaceful option to the lingering conflict through dialogue between the insurgents and the federal authorities has been building up ever since the Sultan of Sokoto, the leader of the Moslem community in Nigeria, called on the Federal Government to consider a general amnesty for the insurgents. Virtually all Northern leaders, including the Northern Governors’ Forum and the Arewa Consultative Assembly, have joined the Sultan in calling for a general amnesty for the insurgents. It is believed that the National Security Adviser recently advised President Jonathan that a military solution to the conflict is no longer feasible. The insurgency has hurt the North very badly. It has more or less paralysed economic activities in the major commercial centres of Kano and Kaduna. No new investments can be expected in the North for some time on account of the ongoing conflict there. Northern leaders acknowledge this and want an end to the bloody conflict. There is also some concern among Southern leaders about the insurgency. Recently, the leader of the ACN, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, lent his voice in support of the call for a general amnesty for the insurgents if they agree to lay down their arms.

    For the Christian community in Nigeria, the call for amnesty must be painful as the majority of victims of the Boko Haram terror are Christians for whom the state is not able to provide any security. The state is supposed to protect religious freedom, the right to practice one’s religion freely. But that is no longer the case in most parts of the North where churches are frequently attacked by Boko Haram insurgents. Majority of Christians in the country will find it difficult to understand or accept the planned amnesty for the insurgents. But some Christian leaders, including the head of the Catholic Church in Nigeria, Cardinal Onayeikan, say they are willing to support the planned amnesty under suitable conditions. The President of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Oritsejafor, has expressed some reservations about the planned amnesty, insisting that the insurgents who have unleashed such terror and death on Christians in the North should not go unpunished. His views more accurately reflect the anger and dismay felt by the Christian community in Nigeria about the violence in the North targeted largely at Christians. These people do not understand or accept the immunity for the insurgents implied in the planned amnesty.

    The fact of the matter which President Jonathan has to consider is that the military option adopted to tackle the insurgency has simply not worked. The insurgency is getting stronger and better organised. It has free access to funds and weapons, and its adherents are becoming increasingly fanatical and unbending. If the security forces were winning the war, an amnesty for the insurgents would be uncalled for. Despite their brave and best efforts, the security agencies have had little or no success in tackling the terror being unleashed in Northern Nigeria by the insurgents. There is some evidence that these insurgents are getting substantial assistance, including funds and weapons, from Al Qaeda, among other foreign collaborators. They have some local support as well.

    Altogether, it is a conflict that our security forces cannot win as the enemy is evasive and illusive. It is difficult to defeat an invisible enemy that is constantly on the move. There must be a lot of frustration in our security forces that they are unable to really defeat the insurgents. But we cannot allow the carnage to continue without seeking an alternative to the use of force as a means of solving the problem. This is the cruel dilemma that President Jonathan has to face.

    In taking a decision whether or not to engage the insurgents President Jonathan will be guided by the thought of what effect an amnesty will have on his electoral chances in 2015. He needs the support of the North if he is going to get the PDP nomination and win the presidential elections. Even without the problem of Boko Haram he is by no means certain that he can clear the hurdle of northern opposition to his re-election in 2015. This is why an amnesty, being demanded by Northern leaders, is of critical importance to the political equation and President Jonathan’s bid for re-election in 2015. The problem is that the talks with Boko Haram may break down and scuttle the whole idea of an amnesty. Boko Haram has become factional and there is no guarantee that, collectively, it will agree to lay down its arms and end the conflict in the North. An amnesty for the group should not be granted unless there is reasonable assurance that it will bring the conflict to an end. Northern and Christian leaders must be brought into the dialogue with Boko Haram. Northern leaders should be made to provide reasonable guarantees that Boko Haram will honour the terms of the amnesty. The leaders of Boko Haram must be identified and should be made to offer guarantees that the insurgency by Boko Haram will not be resumed after the amnesty.

    On the part of the victims of the Boko Haram violence, it is necessary that they be offered some form of compensation by the state for its failure to offer them any protection. It is the least the state can do to show its concern and sympathy for the victims of the mindless violence being inflicted on the country. But the medium to long term solution to the religious violence in the North is for the state and federal governments to invest more in the enlightenment and education of the youths in Northern Nigeria. They must be given skills that will enable them to be gainfully employed.

  • Amnesty is ploy to defraud Nigeria, says Shehu Sani

    Rights activist Shehu Sani said yesterday that the amnesty for members of the Boko Haram insurgency is a ploy to defraud the government of billions of naira.

    Sani, who led former President Olusegun Obasanjo to visit the members of the sect, told The Nation that the amnesty deal would backfire.

    He alleged that Northern elders, who pressured the government into announcing amnesty for members of the sect, did so out of fear of being consumed by the violence.

    He said: “The amnesty pronouncement by the government is an exercise in futility. It is more of a scam to defraud the Nigerian state of billions of naira. The amnesty announced by the government will not yield any positive result.

    “First, it is ill-intentioned because you cannot just declare amnesty for members of Boko Haram and expect them to join the next available bus from their bases and drive down to Abuja waiting to see Jonathan. That is a wishful thinking.

    “Before you have an amnesty, you need to have a credible committee of persons. It should not be just appointees of government, but a committee that will be recognised by the government and respected by the sect.

    “The committee will be empowered to start off a mediation process by first extracting a commitment of ceasefire from the sect and a commitment from the government that all that is agreed to will be implemented.

    “When we have a ceasefire of about eight months, the committee will use the period to take stock of the victims of this violence, the orphans, the widows and the destruction that has been caused as well as the greviances and the victims on the part of members of the sect.

    “It should also be given access to visit detention centres where members of Boko Haram and their families or those suspected to be members of the sect are being detained. When you go about this thing step by step, you will achieve result. But what is likely going to happen is that members of the sect will dismiss the amnesty, condemn the committee.

    “Don’t forget that traditional rulers in the North, including the Sultan, are themselves target of the sect. So, if you make such people members of the committee, I think you have not really gotten neutral persons that will address the problem.

    “So, for me, there are people whose idea of amnesty is extracting billions of naira and dollars from the federal government in the name of distributing it to members of Boko Haram who have never made any financial request. At the end of the day, a regime of scam will become the amnesty deal.”

     

  • Cutting MDAs; UNESCO’s 26%; ‘Amnesty’ for amputees? FRSC: the new police?

    Cutting MDAs; UNESCO’s 26%; ‘Amnesty’ for amputees? FRSC: the new police?

    Streamlining Ministries Departments and Agencies (MDAs) is welcome if money saved improves infrastructure in education, health, security and power. To free its citizens from the financial demon of electricity power insufficiency and failure, Nigeria urgently needs 100,000Mw. We should meet UNESCO’s 26% of budget invested in education infrastructure. The MDA cuts needs similar cuts in obscene political ‘Salaries and Perks’ which are ‘SAPping’ Nigeria dry. How about part-time legislators?

    Amnesty is not just amnesty pay-outs to retired bombers. How about ‘Amnesty for Amputees’ with pay-outs for all bomb victims? Amnesty strategies should go with compensation and care for amputees and other victims.

    The North under-developed the South through federal manipulation and forgot to develop itself to catch up with the stunted South. Where is that money? If Ibori and Alams had billions what did other governors have? There are few saints, military or civilian, North or South of the Rivers Niger and Benue. Happily the North embraces the train after killing it for 30 years of road transport. Kano announced a 4-year Chinese construction of intra-city monorail. This will be a near-replica of Lagos State’s ‘Jakande-rail’ truncated by Buhari/Babangida at a cost of $183m for breach of contract 30 years ago. Forgive me if I do not clap for ‘progressive’ Kano. Better get Buhari’s permission. But perhaps being Kano, you do not need it, abi?

    Congratulations to government for the Ore-Benin road. Friends said they ‘did the road in an hour instead of the 5-24 hours last year’. Diezani Alison-Madueke, former Minister of Works, can take off her orange overalls and stop weeping on NTA. However with good roads come responsibility to drive safely, conscious of one’s cargo, passengers and other road users. The loss of between 45-80 precious Nigerian lives is a blood-stained testimony to the need for less haste and more speed control. Unmindful of tyres, obstacles or state of mind of the driver, high speed kills worldwide and inflammable cargo like petrol is begging to ignite. I have always dreaded passing through Ogere during those endless stand-till go-slows. How many of the thousands of us stuck there would be burnt in a holocaust if 1 or 1000 of those tankers had caught fire or been maliciously ignited to cover-up a petrol theft? Such a conflagration, funeral pyre, would have been seen by the cosmonauts in space just as the Ogere go-slow is a talking-point for pilots on the Lagos-Abuja and Lagos-London air route! The FRSC struggled for 30 years with Ogere before December. Can NISER calculate the cost of ‘Ogere Traffic Mismanagement’ in financial losses and the trillions of man-hours? It is only when, in two minutes, you drive through a nightmare like Ogere or a deadly pothole, where you spent countless hours of misery during 30 years, that you look back in anger at those who refused to make the road passable for 30 years. So as we clap today, we remember the suffering and death we have endured due to government and MDA maximum incompetence and a lack of love for Nigeria.

    Potholed roads injure Nigerians including Great Achebe and claim lives but so do smooth new roads. But at a point we blame the drivers not the road. Tanker and trailer drivers seem above the law with ‘might is right’, wrong lane driving, poor parking and overloaded axles. For the commercial vehicles driven with a death wish, NURTW has been more efficient at providing the fifth column army for violent party politicking than queuing, driving within speed limits and obeying the Highway Code. Infringements are more often ‘bribed’ and it seems ‘FRSC stop and search’ has crept into the vacuum left by cancelling the police checkpoint. The FRSC must reverse this public perception to further justify the recent award from NASS and international outreach plans.

    In Ibadan, just before the Secretariat junction coming from UCH, there is a daily 7am FRSC ‘Road Marshals checkpoint’. Perhaps they have the highest moral goals. But if I was a commercial driver, I would feel annoyed and destabilised at the delay of a methodical ‘particulars and vehicle inspection’. At that time ‘FRSC operation Keep Moving’ is better than FRSC ‘Go Slow’ particulars check. Are they authorised? The authorisation should be withdrawn as it is giving FRSC a bad name. I have been flagged down on the expressway for ‘particulars check’ on 10 occasions to fill ‘a quota of arrests’. Once, unsolved murdered late Uncle Bola Ige was my only passenger. As a foundation FRSC Road Marshal, I believe this is a misapplication of powers and responsibility of FRSC. FRSC cannot become the new police checkpoint and FRSC should not allow its staff, from boredom, lack of supervision, seeking financial gain, wickedness or ‘quota catching’ to take up checkpoint duty cancelled by IGP Abubakar! If they do that near Secretariat what happens in the hinterland? Keeping FRSC’s reputation clean is a glorious accolade for FRSC management. So far the NSCDC seems, in public perception, the cleanest organisation. There is room for more ‘My oga[s] at the top’ of the honesty tree. Forgive that man. At least he is honest. As roads improve, educating tanker, trailer and NURTW drivers, enforcing right hand driving, speed limits, parking off the road, axle weights, and holding waking/services for the dead road users in the motor park where the NURTW vehicle originated, will become more important than ‘particulars checks’ for cutting deaths!

     

  • A note before the amnesty

    A note before the amnesty

    SIR: Following pressures from some Nigerians, the federal government has constituted a committee for Boko Haram amnesty. I am concerned about which Boko Haram the amnesty is meant for. The President has made two contradictory statements on Boko Haram. First, he said that some are in his government. Secondly, he referred to them as faceless or invincible. Now if actually they are part of his government, then amnesty is not necessary since they already enjoy financial and other benefits. And if they are faceless and invincible like the President said, then also amnesty is not necessary. This is because you cannot give amnesty to an invincible/faceless group. Except those proponents of amnesty can identify them, otherwise this might become another “Nigerian Project” (conduit pipe for steeling public money).

    Since the President has gone ahead to constitute a Boko Haram amnesty committee, then fairness and equity demands that he should also constitute Compensation Committee to pay the victims and surviving family members of those attacked/killed/displaced by the Boko Haram. However, to achieve a balance, this proposed committee should also pay the innocent victims and surviving family members of those attacked/killed/displaced by the MEND etc. A look at the money spent so far on amnesty to, and rehabilitation of MEND members, would give an idea on how much that could also be spent on Boko Haram. I understand that no amount of compensation can replace loved ones etc, but it’s also their right to demand compensation, after all, the primary responsibilities of every government is security and welfare. Failing in these duties, means that the federal government should accept some responsibilities.

    Both the American and United Kingdom governments paid compensation to the victims of terrorists’ attacks of 9/11 and 7/7. I suggest that innocent families of those attacked/killed/displaced by both MEND and Boko Haram institute a class action against the federal government. This brings to mind the request for N495 million compensation made by the Kano luxury bus operators to the federal government for the loss of nine buses during the March 18 bomb blasts. The step by luxury bus operator(s) is a positive step; it is what others should do. They should consider legal action if the federal government fails.

    Having accepted amnesty for MEND and Boko Haram, which goes with high monetary inducements, the federal government should be prepared to start negotiations with other groups or new ones that might spring up. After all, what is good for the goose should be good for the gander.

     

    • Chinedu Vincent Akuta

    United Kingdom

  • ‘Amnesty not answer to Boko Haram’

    ‘Amnesty not answer to Boko Haram’

    Human rights activist and lawyer Dr Tunji Abayomi has opposed the proposed amnesty for the members of the Boko Haram sect, saying that they are terrorists.

    He advised the Northern leaders to secure the assurance of peace from the sect members before negotiating for amnesty.

    Abayomi declared in a statement in Lagos that amnesty is not the solution to terrorism in the North.

    He said: “Let the leaders of the North do the negotiation; let them secure the assurance of peace from their children. Let them do what is needful for the North. Let them do something new for Nigeria”.

    The rights activist supported President Goodluck Jonathan’s refusal to grant amnesty to the group on the group that its members are invisible.

    Abayomi maintained that Nigerians must not surrender their liberty to the killers.

    He stressed: “I agree with President Goodluck Jonathan, but for a different reason. I am against amnesty, not because Boko Haram is invisible. To the contrary, Boko Haram is very visible in the bombed United Nations (UN) House and the international workers that died, in the thousands of Nigerians already murdered in cold blood, in the churches that have been burnt with helpless worshipers, and in the schools senselessly razed down.

    “It is very visible in the many that are terminally wounded in this one–way unprovoked war declared on us. It is visible in the amputees, in the young children and the foetus in the womb who are denied the right to life. It is visible in the horrible reputation imposed on our nation. Boko Haram is very visible in the shattered buses and bodies of Kano.

    “It is not because Boko Haram is invisible that am against amnesty. It is for the simple reason that we must not as a people or as a nation surrender our liberty to mass murderers”.

    Abayomi challenged the pro-amnesty campaigners to explain the grievances of the sect members for the purpose of defining their focus.

    He said: “Those calling for amnesty should tell us what Boko Haram wants so that we can find a subject matter upon which negotiation can be erected.

    “They should tell us what to negotiate with the extremists whose principle is to murder innocent citizens in cold blood simply because they belong, not to their religion, which they disrespectfully misunderstand and misapply”.

    Abayomi disagreed with those who claimed that the Boko Haram menace was due to poverty. He challenged such people to point to any state or region in the country that is not ravaged by poverty.

    He added: “Is there any part of this nation that knows no poverty? Must we wage war on life to conquer poverty? Those who are genuinely poor don’t manufacture bombs. They don’t carry AK – 47. They don’t boast of evil on the internet. They don’t cut people’s throat while desecrating the Koran by reading it in support of cold blooded murder. Poor people that I know in the North and all over Nigeria don’t maim the poor. What they do is to work in pursuit of freedom from poverty like the ones that helped my mother to give me education. Poverty cannot justify the choice of evil.”

     

  • Amnesty for Boko Haram:  between  Gumi and Kukah (I)

    Amnesty for Boko Haram: between Gumi and Kukah (I)

    Predictably, last month’s call for amnesty for Boko Haram by the Sultan of Sokoto and nominal head of Nigerian Muslims, Alhaji Muhammadu Sa’ad Abubakar, and its initial outright rejection by President Goodluck Jonathan have provoked strong avowals and disavowals. Of all these avowals and disavowals, three have stood out because of the prominence of the religious leaders that have made them and the way they seem to have traded places in their disparate positions.

    First was Sheikh Ahmad Gumi, son of the renowned late Sheikh Abubakar Gumi, and himself a leading light of the Izala sect founded by the father. In its lead story of three Wednesdays ago, the up and coming Abuja based Blueprint newspaper exclusively reported him to have dismissed the Sultan’s call as “hypocritical.” This was clearly against the grain of the apparent widespread support in the North and among Muslims for the Sultan’s call.

    Boko Haram, said Sheikh Gumi, is an ideology that respects no law, “not even the Qur’an or Hadith or scholarly fatwa.” There is, he said, therefore no basis for dialogue with its adherents, much less granting them any amnesty. “It is,” he avowed, “a creed that must be crushed.”

    Two weekends ago, Bishop Mathew Hassan Kukah, the Catholic Bishop of Sokoto Diocese, issued an Easter message that couldn’t have disagreed more with Sheikh Gumi’s position. To reject amnesty for the sect, he said, was to operate at the same (disagreeable) level with its adherents. The offer itself, he said, may not solve all our problems, “but it will bring us closer to a new dawn.” Those who have rejected the amnesty, he also said, have focused more on how the issues involved “fit the survivalist instinct of the president and his ruling party.”

    The same weekend, Bishop Kukah’s highly respected senior in the Catholic hierarchy, Cardinal John Onaiyekan, the Catholic Archbishop of Abuja, spoke in the same vein in his own Easter message. “The call for amnesty,” he said, “would seem to me quite appropriate and even necessary.” Useful and necessary as the security response has been, he said, it has obviously not been enough on its own.

    Overall, the cardinal’s Easter message was more measured and more cautious than the bishop’s but it was the latter’s that received wider media publicity.

    This position of the two senior Catholic clergy is obviously at variance with that of the leadership of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) under Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor, and possibly with that of the majority of Nigerian Christians. CAN, as we all know, has been vehemently opposed to any form of accommodation with Boko Haram which it has accused of committing genocide against Christians in the North, with at least tacit support of the country’s Muslim leadership.

    The position of the cardinal and the bishop, though consistent with the religious doctrine of forgiveness, clearly exposes them to a charge of appeasement. However, from the consistent manner they have stuck to that position in spite of the fact that the Catholic Church, probably more than any other, has borne the brunt of the alleged Boko Haram mass killings of Christians – alleged, because Boko Haram has apparently since become a franchise used by criminals and possibly rogue elements in the security services alike for their own ends – it is obvious that this is a cross that the two are prepared to bear.

    In his dissention from the popular Muslim and Northern support for the Sultan’s call for amnesty for Boko Haram, Sheikh Gumi seems to be in total agreement with the country’s authorities. For example, speaking at a seminar in Lagos last Tuesday on “Enhancing Military-Media Relations towards Improved Security” in support of his Commander-in-Chief’s initial rejection of the Sultan’s call, the rather bellicose army chief, Lt. General Azubuike Ihejirika, said in effect that force must remain the principal, if not the only, weapon for fighting Boko Haram.

    “There is no country where terrorism has been curbed,” he said, “that force was not applied. There is none in history…I talk so much about force because that is my own line of business. I am to destroy the terrorists, if I am able to find them.” (National Mirror, April 3).

    Sheikh Gumi and the authorities may agree on what they believe is the need to crush Boko Haram, but General Ihejirika’s position clearly defines the limit of that agreement. For, whereas both the general and his boss obviously believe they can destroy the sect militarily, the sheikh believes they simply can’t. Their government, he said, lacks the competence and, by killing and terrorising more people than Boko Haram through its Joint Task Force Operations, it also lacks the moral strength to succeed.

    His own solution? “A select Muslim high ranking officer, good intelligence, special strike squads (and) genuine cooperation of the civilian population,” he said.

    Of the four elements of the sheikh’s formula for the defeat of Boko Haram, most people, I guess, would agree with him on the last three, in so far as they are simple common sense. By the same token, however, hardly would anyone agree with him that “a select Muslim high ranking officer” is necessary for success in the war against Boko Haram.

    On the contrary, it is more likely to further divide an already divided military along religious lines and weaken it even more. Indeed with good intelligence and cooperation from the civilian population, it matters little, if at all, what the religious or ethnic affiliation of the field commander – and even of the commander-in-chief – is, so long as both are men of good faith.

    The fundamental problem with government’s apparent over-reliance on the use of force in tackling Boko Haram is that it cannot win hearts and minds. General Ihejirika may, as he has said, be in the business of using brute force to solve problems but as he has also acknowledged, albeit with little conviction apparently, brute force alone, or even as the principal weapon, has never solved anybody’s problems. If it did, all terrorists would have since been wiped off the face of the earth given the overwhelming force governments the world over – especially that of America, the world’s self-appointed global police and its only super-power – have deployed, and continue to deploy, against terror organisations.

    Every problem requires good intelligence and the cooperation of all and sundry for a viable solution. Above all, every problem requires good faith on the part of all parties involved, but especially on the part of those in authority. None of these three requirements can be secured by relying on brute force only or in the main, especially of the kind deployed in Borno and Yobe states since 2009, following the extrajudicial killings of several leaders, and even many more suspected members, of Boko Haram.

    This brute force was similar, perhaps even worse, than that used in the Delta against the region’s militants before they were granted amnesty in June 2009, more specifically the kind of brute force former president, General Olusegun Obasanjo, inflicted on the Odi community in Bayelsa State, President Jonathan’s home state, about 12 years ago; a brute force which Justice Lambo Akanbi strongly condemned in his judgment last month and for which he awarded the community N37.6 billion against the Federal Government as compensation.

    There may well have been some politics behind the size of compensation the court’s compensation. But politics or no, it is still legitimate to ask, as The Guardian did in its editorial of March 11 about the judgment, “Why would a government unleash violence on its defenceless citizens in the name of maintaining law and order? Why would such a horrendous havoc be wrecked on a community because of a few bad elements as though there is no single innocent and law abiding citizen in the community who deserves government’s protection?”

     

     

    Breath of fresh air indeed!

    When President Goodluck Jonathan promised during his campaign for the 2011 election that his administration would usher in a “breath of fresh air” into the country, I thought it was no more than one of those empty sloganeering politicians over-indulge in during campaigns. Nothing the administration has done – or not done – since then has proved my scepticism wrong. On the contrary, the degree of insecurity from arbitrary use of power by the authorities and the scale of corruption in the land alone have enveloped the land with so much stink you can barely breathe.

    Two days ago, the administration enhanced its reputation for doublespeak when it picked on Leadership newspaper over its exclusive story last week about an alleged presidential directive to its operatives to use all means, fair or foul, to frustrate the emergence of All Progressives Congress as a formidable opposition to the ruling Peoples Democratic Party.

    After four of the newspaper’s staff honoured a police invitation for questioning, it released two of them in the night but detained the other two reportedly with instructions from “the oga at the top” to keep them incommunicado until they reveal the source of their story and of the documentary proof which they published to back their story.

    This is outright Gestapo style out of the book of Hitler’s Germany. Some “breath of fresh air” indeed! The other two were released yesterday night.

     

  • Cracks in Presidency over amnesty for Boko Haram

    Cracks in Presidency over amnesty for Boko Haram

    Despite President Goodluck Jonathan’s disposition to amnesty for Boko Haram, not all members of his cabinet believe in the option, it was learnt yesterday.

    Also, it was learnt that the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mr. Mohammed Bello Adoke (SAN) and the National Security Adviser, Mr. Aliyu Sambo, on Saturday fine-tuned the list of members of the Technical Committee who will work out the modalities for the amnesty.

    The work of the Technical Committee will pave the way for the inauguration of the Main Committee in two weeks time.

    Besides, the NSA is said to have met with ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo for his suggestion on the security challenges facing the nation.

    Following a session of the National Security Council, the President decided to raise a panel to weigh options on amnesty for Boko Haram members.

    But investigation by our correspondent revealed that not all members of the cabinet supported the amnesty solution.

    It was learnt that some military chiefs, cabinet members and top aides prefer a military solution to the security threats posed by Boko Haram as the case in Turkey and Algeria.

    Apart from the gains recorded by the Joint Task Force in repelling Boko Haram, those opposed to amnesty indicated that security agencies had reached a stage of unmasking those behind the challenges the country is facing.

    They claimed that some of the detained Boko Haram members were already set to disclose their sponsors.

    According to sources, those opposed to amnesty are of the opinion that the political forces behind Boko Haram are just using the agitation for amnesty to secure a soft landing.

    A highly-placed source, who pleaded not to be named, said: “Some cabinet ministers do not see any reason why the government should grant amnesty to Boko Haram, in view of the casualty figures from the attacks by the sect.

    “They are also of the opinion that the amnesty bait might prove fatal for the government if Boko Haram continues with its attacks.

    “They prefer military option instead of the political solution which some people in the North are canvassing.”

    Responding to a question, the source said some of the affected cabinet members and top aides have fears that those sponsoring Boko Haram are hiding under amnesty to get a soft landing.”

    The source added: “Well, the cabinet members are suspecting that Boko Haram sponsors are looking for soft-landing.

    “In spite of the reservations of some cabinet ministers and presidential aides, Jonathan has raised a committee to weigh all options.

    “The President decided to opt for amnesty to prove that he is a listening leader and he wants to carry all the geopolitical zones along in his administration.”

    As at press time, it was gathered that the NSA and the AGF met on Saturday to fine-tune the list of members of the Technical Committee, which will work out modalities for amnesty for Boko Haram.

    Although the list of the members of the Technical Committee was kept under wraps, it was gathered that it comprises both military officers and strategic cabinet members.

    Another source in government said: “When the Technical Committee completes its assignment in two weeks, the Presidency will then constitute the main panel, which would handle the amnesty programme for Boko Haram.”

    The NSA met with Obasanjo on the security challenges facing the country.

    According to a source, Mr. Sambo Dasuki had talks with Obasanjo on the way forward for the nation.

    “I think Dasuki, acting on the instructions of the President, went to discuss with Obasanjo on government’s plans. It is likely that the NSA put Obasanjo in the picture of the amnesty plan before Jonathan conceded to it.”

  • A most contentious amnesty

    A most contentious amnesty

    After many months of dithering, the scale of killings in the North and the virtually stalemated military campaign against Boko Haram terrorists have seemed to finally persuade the Goodluck Jonathan presidency to resignedly offer amnesty to the violent Islamist sect. There is hardly a voice of dissent against amnesty in the North, perhaps because the region has borne the brunt of the violence undermining regional commercial activities and engendering poverty, social dislocations and alienation. But the South has been largely unenthusiastic about amnesty. It describes the proposed deal as wicked, unfair and counterproductive. Even if the Jonathan government goes through with the deal, a consensus between the North and the South on the amnesty deal is unlikely.

    Amnesty for Boko Haram militants is still a long way off. There is no agreement yet on who should be talking with whom, or when the talking should begin. More importantly, and no matter how much everyone pretends these things do not matter, there are deeply troubling issues, some of them moral, surrounding the proposed amnesty deal. First, and considering the senseless bloodshed, would it be wise to extend amnesty to Boko Haram masterminds, or should amnesty be limited to only the foot soldiers? If the masterminds know they would be excluded, would they be willing to talk peace and sheathe their swords? Assuming that that dilemma can be surmounted, would the proponents of amnesty, who have persuaded themselves that Boko Haram is largely a product of economic alienation, not expect a massive infusion of funds to wage war against poverty in the affected areas?

    And if funds are allocated to fight economic alienation in the affected areas, would this not amount to rewarding lawlessness? Would it not suggest to future law breakers that levying war against the state has its sweet rewards? There are many more issues surrounding the amnesty issue that require deep reflections and negotiations before the deal can fly. But overall, if no one is punished for the senseless waste of lives and destruction of public property, it is hard to see how an enduring peace can be secured in the face of such grave injustice. This may be why many have qualified their support for amnesty with a call for the sect’s masterminds to be punished, while others have asked for Boko Haram leaders to demonstrate public penitence before amnesty could be given any consideration.

    The country, particularly the federal government and the North, is desperate for peace, for the scale of destruction is so massive that the region may need many years and much help to rebuild its economy, an economy which was in the best of times gasping for breath. The country will also have to ask itself why the economic inequality in the country seems pronounced in the North in spite of the federally allocated and internally generated revenue accruing to the state and local governments in the Boko Haram region. The question is whether the revenue is too small or public officials have injudiciously used the money. Finally, and still on the propriety of amnesty, the country will have to ask itself whether by negotiating with terror, it is not demonstrating lack of character and principles or setting a precedent that could yet return to haunt it in the future.

  • Turai Yar’ Adua backs amnesty for Boko Haram

    Turai Yar’ Adua backs amnesty for Boko Haram

    •As Jonathan berates Northern Govs

    Former first lady, Hajia Turai Yar’Adua is advocating the granting of amnesty to members of the Islamic sect, Boko Haram, the same way her late husband, President Umaru Yar’Adua, declared amnesty for the Niger Delta militants in 2009.

    The former First Lady made this call while receiving a posthumous award for her husband at the Eko Hotel & Suites in Lagos on Friday.

    The award, given by the Niger Delta Young Professionals (NDYP), was in recognition of the contribution of the former president to peace in the Niger Delta.

    She said: “I want my brother (President Goodluck Jonathan) to sit and think carefully and grant amnesty to Boko Haram. I am expecting my brother to do what Umaru did for the militants in the Niger Delta. Some people sang here today that children are dying in the Niger Delta; let me tell you that children are dying every day in the North.

    “As your sister and a Northerner, I want you to think carefully. There is so much suffering in the North just like it happened in the Niger Delta. Your sister says think carefully and do what Umaru did.”

    The former First Lady described her late husband as a detribalised Nigerian who felt the pains of the Niger Delta.

    “Before he gave the amnesty Umaru said to me, ‘Turai, people are dying there and we have to save those children because they are the future. When we are gone who will take care of Nigeria. We must do it not just for oil but we can have other resources from that place, we must do it for Nigeria.’”

    President Jonathan who was represented by the Minister for Special Duties and Intergovernmental Affairs, Mallam Kabiru Tanimu, said that unlike the case with the Niger Delta militants there are limitations in giving amnesty to Boko Haram.

    “In Niger Delta, you could see the militants. When you need to engage them you know where to get them in the creeks, you can talk to them. But now we have a problem in the North and you can’t get Boko Haram, you don’t know how to talk to them.

    “No matter how passionate the President wants to engage them, there are limitations. However, government is making a concrete and honest effort towards solving the problem and very soon people will see the faithfulness of Mr. President. What we solicit is understanding and patience.”

    The President also berated Northern governors for failing to tackle the problems of Boko Haram.

    “When the Niger Delta was raging, leaders of Niger Delta especially the governors were the drivers of the process before the Federal Government came in. For goodness sake, what efforts are the Northern leaders making?

    “Security agencies are not magicians or ghosts. These people do not come from the moon, they are our friends, our brothers, and they are our neighbours. Why are we not assisting the security agencies with information?”

    The President also lamented that economic activities in the key northern cities have been paralysed by the activities of Boko Haram.

    “Insecurity is not the problem of the government alone, it is our collective issue. Today, the five major cities in the north have been paralysed economically. Kano, Jos, Kaduna, Maiduguri and Gombe are shut down. But let me assure you that Mr. President has promised to look into the problem and very soon, we will see the result.”

    The federal government has set up a committee to work out modalities for granting amnesty to members of the sect.

    The committee has two weeks to complete its assignment.

     

  • The case for conditional amnesty

    The issue of insecurity and enormous destruction and damage to lives and properties over the past years in Nigeria is of concern to the majority. There is need for all stakeholders to proffer solutions to the problem and bring peace and security back to Nigeria in the shortest possible time. The majority of insecurity problems is attributable to mainly two categories of people.

    The first category are the plain criminals who bomb and kill for pecuniary gain. These category are to be treated strictly as criminals and need no consideration in terms of negotiations and/or amnesty.

    The second category are religious criminals comprising the likes of Boko Haram, Jamatul Islamiyya etc. The suggested approach is to further sub-categorize these groups as follows:

    1. The innocent and misguided members. This subcategory consists of those people who were lured into the group for various reasons including but not limited to deceitful and false doctrines but are yet to stain their hands with any criminal activities. This group is the most critical for the government to negotiate with and grant conditional amnesty. The government should concentrate on identifying those in this sub-category, increasing their numbers, extracting vital information on operations, logistics etc from them as former insiders and granting them conditional amnesty and protection. Conditional amnesty in the sense that they will not be prosecuted as long as they live criminal-free lifes and no past criminal activities are traceable to them.

    2.      The repentant moderates. This subcategory consists of members who may have soiled their hands with criminal activities but have regrets about their past actions and are willing to change their ways and opt out. Having been involved in some form of criminal activities before, those in this subcategory may not readily want to accept responsibility for their past misdeeds and they are likely to be large in numbers. The objective is to identify these repentant moderates who are willing to face their punishments and change their way of life to criminal free society members.

    3.      The hardcore unrepentant criminals. This subcategory of members cannot be negotiated with under any circumstances. The objective here is to identify them and bring them to justice for atrocities committed against mankind and the nation. It may not be out of place for the government to put forward incentives for individuals or groups who can assist with the apprehension and prosecution of the members of this group.

    4.      There are numerous advantages to adopting a policy of selective and conditional amnesty. Some of the advantages include:

    i. The government provides a legal and easy pathway for the innocent and misguided members and repentant moderates to renounce violence and be reintegrated into society.

    ii. The government gathers vital information from those two groups mentioned above for proper planning towards combating and apprehending the hard core unrepentant criminals.

    iii.  A policy of selective and conditional amnesty decimates the rank of members of the criminal groups thus effectively reducing resources to be channeled towards combating insecurity.

    iv.    A policy of selective and conditional amnesty may as well be the new thrust towards combating insecurity in the country. The government will need to add constructive education, gainful employment and other similar policy initiatives in the mix to have a comprehensive turn-around.

    5.      There are other pre-requisites that the government needs to provide for a successful outcome. Some of these are:

    i.The government needs to provide security and protection and some form of compensation to whistle blowers who alert government to the operations of the criminal elements leading to their apprehension for prosecution.

    ii.     The government needs to lay out concrete plans for re-integrating innocent and misguided members and repentant moderates into society