Tag: boko haram

  • Aliyu cautions FG on dialogue with  Boko Haram

    Aliyu cautions FG on dialogue with Boko Haram

    Chairman of the Northern States Governors Forum (NSGF), Mu’azu Babangida Aliyu, on Tuesday advised the Federal government not to dialogue with faceless but recognised members of the Boko Harma sect in order to prevent fraudsters from hijacking the peace process.

    Aliyu also urged members of the group to come out of their hiding for genuine and meaningful dialogue that would finally restore peace back to the region and the country.

    Speaking in Minna the Niger State capital on Tuesday when he received ”The Road map for Peace Unity and Development of Northern Nigeria” prepared by the Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF) , Aliyu said, ”we should know who we are talking to, we should not allow 419 people to hijack the process.

    ”We should confirm who we are dealing with, we should talk to them but we should talk only to genuine people,” the Niger State governor advised.

    Expressing the forum endorsement of federal government acceptance of the olive branch extended by the sect, Aliyu maintained that the forum support any move that will bring lasting peace to the region, including dialogue with the leadership of Boko Haram.

    He also advocated the merger of ACF and the Northern Elders Forum (NEF) both socio -political organizations with membership drawn from the northern part of the country.

    He argued that the merger of the two bodies will give the northern region the opportunity to speak with one voice on all issues.

     

  • CPC urges Buhari to reject Boko Haram’s mediator role

    The Congress for Progressive Change has advised former head of state, Muhammadu Buhari, to reject his nomination by the Boko Haram sect as a mediator in negotiations with the Federal Government.

    The National Chairman of the party, Prince Tony Momoh, gave the advice on Tuesday in Abuja in a chat with the News Agency of Nigeria.

    “There is no need for any other person to attend a meeting between the Federal Government and Boko Haram for whatever grievances they say they have.

    “We in the CPC do not see where Buhari comes in; we are concerned by the way the name of Gen. Buhari is being dragged into this affair.

    “Another thing is that nobody reached out to Gen. Buhari to say he has been nominated or is being nominated along with others, to mediate or be witnesses to discussion between Boko Haram and the Federal Government,” he said.

    Momoh said that Buhari had not told anybody or the party that he was interested in the nomination.

    The national chairman maintained that the CPC would not associate with issues that involved criminality.

    He said that it was important for the government to maintain “true democracy” by providing adequate security and welfare to the citizens.

    “We believe in one country which must remain together and move together in the direction of peace, justice and fair play,” Momoh said.

    According to him, the abuse of the democratic system is the result of some challenges confronting the country.

    “Any abuse of this democracy is unjust.

    “We have chosen a two-legged approach: democracy and social justice, and we want to achieve social justice by using a system of government called democracy, “he said.

    He told NAN that for the nation to witness true democracy, “all hands must be on deck” to tackle corruption in the country.

     

  • Boko Haram’s clarifications

    Boko Haram’s clarifications

    Last week, the Islamic sect, Boko Haram, unexpectedly called for dialogue with the Goodluck Jonathan government to resolve the insurgency that has led to the killing of hundreds of people and large-scale destruction of public and private properties in the Northeast. The Federal Government had all along been amenable to dialogue; it will now get its wish. But the sect, until now, had been ambivalent. If grey areas in the proposal could be ironed out, however, both groups would be prepared to enter into more valuable discussions expected to lead to a truce and possibly a peace deal. Last Thursday, the sect had through teleconference with newsmen in Maiduguri named its terms for peace and offered two lists of negotiators to represent both the sect and the government. On the side of the sect were Abu Abdulazeez, who claimed to be the deputy leader of Boko Haram and head negotiator, Abu Abbas, Sheikh Ibrahim Yusuf, Sheikh Kontagora and Mamman Nur.

    Either because the sect’s ad hoc spokesman was imprecise in language use or he was misunderstood by reporters, the impression he created last Thursday was that the six eminent gentlemen listed as mediators were actually the audacious suggestions of the Boko Haram leadership on behalf of the government. The audacious team was to be led by a former head of state, Gen Muhammadu Buhari. On Sunday, however, the sect clarified that the so-called Federal Government team was actually meant to serve as witnesses, not negotiators, during the anticipated dialogue. The reason they needed witnesses, argued Boko Haram leaders, was that the government was too duplicitous to be trusted. In other words, apart from naming its terms, the sect was also pertinently concerned with the composition of its negotiating team and witnesses. The government is expected to come up with its own list of negotiators.

    It seems quite clear already that the Federal Government has passed the stage of grappling with its conscience over whether it is proper to negotiate with Boko Haram, an organisation it has inscrutably refused to designate as terrorist, or to fight it to the bitter end, assuming an end is really foreseeable in this seemingly interminable and increasingly complex insurgency. On its own part, the sect has said little about why it suddenly appeared interested in dialogue. Perhaps it had to do with pressures from well-meaning people in the North. It, however, warned that though it found it agreeable to enter into dialogue, it still retained enough ordnance and fighting spirit to sustain the insurgency. It is unlikely the Federal Government, which already has its back to the wall, will scorn the sect’s adamantine resolve. Indeed, how the Jonathan government will balance its frenzied desire for peace – with all the ethical minefield of compensating aggrieved Boko Haram members – with the equally more important moral necessity of compensating innocent victims of Boko Haram violence remains to be seen.

    Boko Haram leaders may have clarified their demands and proposals; yet, if the dialogue begins, the negotiators will still find it extremely laborious to set the parameters for negotiation, let alone adhere to them. Much worse will be how, after coming to some form of agreement, both the government and the sect will tackle the uncontrollable freelance gunmen roaming the Northeast with small but potent grudges and causing upheavals far more disproportionate to their sizes.

     

     

  • Boko Haram has killed 3000 people, says Army Chief

    Boko Haram has killed 3000 people, says Army Chief

    Chief of Army staff Gen. Azubuike Ihejirika said yesterday in Ilorin that Boko Haram insurgents have killed over 3,000 people since 2009.

    He Spoke during the opening of the third inter-division and headquarters map reading competition organised by the Nigerian Army Education Corps (NAEC).

    He was represented by the General Officer Commanding (GOC) of the 2 Mechanised division of the Army Maj. Gen. Mohammed Abubakar.

    The Army Chief said: “The changing nature of threats to Nigeria’s national security environment has manifested in the militancy, kidnapping, violent extremism and terrorism. It is a known fact that terrorism worldwide is characterised by extremism, violence hatred, lack of respect for human dignity and constituted authority.

    “The spate of bombings in parts of the north has necessitated the Nigerian Army to review its doctrine with a view to updating our training and operational procedures in order to fulfill our constitutional mandate. Success in this pursuit, therefore calls for renewed and concerted efforts and initiative. “

     

     

     

  • Boko Haram has killed 3,000 since 2009 – COAS

    Boko Haram has killed 3,000 since 2009 – COAS

    At least not less than 3,000 people have been killed by the Boko Haram sect since 2009, the Chief of Army Staff, Lieutenant General Azubuike Ihejirika has said.

    He stated that the sect activities had affected people and businesses in the northern part of the country.

    The COAS spoke on Monday in Ilorin, the Kwara State capital while declaring open the third inter-division and headquarters map reading competition organized by the Nigerian Army Education Corps (NAEC).

    Ihejirika, who was represented by the General Officer, Commanding 2 Division of the Nigerian Army, Major Mohammed Abubakar, added that the current security challenges in the country require collective and extra efforts to tackle.

    His words: “The changing nature of threats to Nigeria’s national security environment has manifested in the militancy, kidnapping, violent extremism and terrorism. It is a known fact that terrorism worldwide is characterized by extremism, violence hatred, lack of respect for human dignity and constituted authority.

    “The spate of bombings in parts of the north had necessitated the Nigerian Army to review its doctrine with a view to updating our training and operational procedures in order to fulfill our constitutional mandate. Success in this pursuit, therefore calls for renewed and concerted efforts and initiative.

    “I therefore urge all of us to remain resilient to be able to overcome the miscreants and terrorist attacks on our psyche and our beloved country through conscientious effort for the country to make good progress. It is in this line, that I commend the determination of NAEC to write and publish a book on ‘terrorism.

    “This will no doubt positively contribute to our determination to fight the present security challenges. The book will also serve as a reference material for researchers on NA viewpoint and strategy against domestic terrorism.”

    Earlier, the Corps Commander, NAEC, Major-General Lucky Banjiram, said the current security challenges in the country had continued to undermine national security.

    He added that the challenges had thereby placed great strains and demands on the Nigerian army’s resources.

     

  • Reps will encourage FG, Boko Haram dialogue – Tambuwal

    Reps will encourage FG, Boko Haram dialogue – Tambuwal

    Speaker of the House of Representatives, Aminu Tambuwal, said the House will encourage the Federal Government to engage in dialogue with the Boko Haram sect.

    Tambuwal who made the statement at the Benin airport on Saturday while speaking with journalists said the move would assist in ending the wave of terrorist acts by the group.

    The News Agency of Nigeria recalls that the sect recently offered to engage in dialogue with the federal government.

    It also named a former head of state, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (rtd.), to lead its five-member negotiation team.

    “I will encourage our leadership to engage the leadership of the sect in dialogue. Whatever will bring peace to this country, we should go for it.

    “We have had more than enough bloodshed of innocent Nigerians and government should do everything possible, including dialoguing with the Boko Haram sect, to bring the killings to an end,’’ Tambuwal said.

    Commenting on the call by the Nigeria Bar Association (NBA) for a referendum on the proposed amendment of the 1999 Constitution, Tambuwal described it as unconstitutional.

    “We are expecting that we will incorporate the views of Nigerians in the amendment, but the call by NBA for a referendum is unconstitutional.

    “I am a lawyer like the President of the NBA, and I know it is unconstitutional,’’ the Speaker said.

    NAN recalls that NBA President Okey Wali had criticised the high number of clauses slated for amendment.

    Wali had also questioned why the National Assembly was in a hurry to amend the Constitution.

    He had said this was inappropriate as President Goodluck Jonathan was yet to forward the Justice Alfa Belgore Report on Constitution Amendment to the legislative body for consideration.

     

     

  • Dialogue: Boko Haram leaders must reveal their identity- Lar

    Dialogue: Boko Haram leaders must reveal their identity- Lar

    Former National Chairman of the  Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP), Chief Solomon Lar has said  that the proposed negotiation between the federal government and the Boko Haram Islamic group should hold only if members of the group reveal the  identity.
    The elder statesman while speaking with journalists in Kaduna  on Sunday  kicked against the proposed dialogue with the terrorists group insisting that the sect members must first reveal their identity.

    “I disagree completely (to dialoguing with Boko Haram) unless they show their identity that Mr. X, Y, Z is Boko Haram. For them to name some people to be their representatives, who are they? They are faceless people, let them come out and reveal their identity”.

    Chief Lar who is a second republic governor of old Plateau state  said that it was not enough for the sect to nominate people to negotiate on their behalf and charged them to come out in the open and identify themselves rather than remaining faceless.
    He wondered if  Gen. Mohammadu Buhari (rtd), Alhaji Ali Mungonu and others nominated by the Islamic group to negotiate on their behalf have agreed to represent them in the proposed dialogue with the federal government.
    “Has Gen Buhari agreed? Is Buhari their representative? Is Ali Mungonu their representative? You see, I didn’t want to mention names, but if they (Buhari and Mungonu) said yes, they are their (Boko Haram’s) representatives, we would.
    “But have they agreed to represent them? Let them come out. During the Niger Delta militants, some people came out and said they were the leaders of the militants. That was very reasonable and that was how the late President Musa Yar’adua was able to tackle the problem of militancy in the Niger Delta. The Niger Delta militants were not faceless like Boko Haram. Why didn’t Boko Haram follow the example of the militants by showing their faces?” he said.
    He condemned Friday’s killing of civil war hero, Major. Gen. Mohammed Shuwa (rtd) at his Maiduguri residence by unknown gunmen and urged the federal government to do everything possible to identify the culprits and bring them to justice.
    According to him, the role the Late Shuwa played in keeping Nigeria one during the Nigerian civil war has not been recognized by the Nigerian government, saying that he remain one of Nigeria’s unsung heroes who was never talk about or recognised by various governments in the country.
    “He was a hero but nobody talks about him. Government upon government never did anything to bring him up and recognise his contribution to Nigeria. Nobody sang his heroism. It is unfortunate, the government must do everything to find out those behind this unfortunate incident and bring them to justice. This is my plea” Lar added.
    He argued that the Jonathan administration was doing its best about the security situation in the country, saying that he was optimistic that “the question of Boko Haram is a matter of days….”

  • Boko Haram’s curious peace offer

    Boko Haram’s curious peace offer

    Last week, the Islamic sect, Boko Haram, unexpectedly proposed dialogue with the Goodluck Jonathan government wearied by years of uprising in the Northeast. The structure and terms of the dialogue, which the sect expects could lead to a truce and possibly peace, are truly bewildering. But the offer comes at a time of increasing turmoil in that region and amidst fears the violence could still spill over to other parts of the country and even beyond. The sect says it is prepared to give dialogue a chance if the government in turn shows some sincerity in negotiating an end to the violence that has undermined governance in that region since 2009.

    Interestingly, the terms of the Boko Haram offer are neither complex nor controversial. Speaking in a telephone conference with journalists in Maiduguri, the deputy leader of the sect, Abu Mohammed Ibn Abdulazeez, says the sect wants the government to arrest and prosecute the former governor of Borno State, Ali Modu Sherrif, with whom it has a long-standing axe to grind, compensate the sect for its losses, rebuild Mosques destroyed in the 2009 uprising led by the former leader, Mohammed Yusuf, release all arrested sect members, rehabilitate displaced wives and children of members, and ensure that the dialogue take place in Saudi Arabia. It is not the business of the sect what the government hopes to do for Boko Haram victims whose lives and businesses have been shattered. But as difficult as these terms seem, it is unlikely they would be impossible to surmount.

    What is in fact difficult is the structure of the dialogue. The sect has asked for what is unprecedented in the annals of peace talks, a request the federal government in its first reaction has not appeared to give deep thoughts to. The sect takes the unusual step of listing the names of those who should represent the government in the talks, and also supplying the names of those who should represent the sect. In other words, the sect does not really expect the government to have a say over who should represent the country, and definitely no say whatsoever over who should represent the sect. As a chronicler of modern history, Palladium cannot recall one instance in which those who levy war against the state have such total control over peace terms and structures. Though the sect was gracious enough to list only five names to represent it, it magnanimously conceded six names to the government side. But it retains control in its entirety over who should sit at the negotiating table. Such temerity.

    If indeed it is true that the dialogue offer is really coming from the Boko Haram leadership, it is likely the Jonathan government will give the sect some attention. My private doubts, however, are that the sect merely wishes to needle the government with carrots that are far from anyone’s reach, and taunt it with an offer the sect knows will be rejected offhand. I have never supported dialogue between the government and terrorists, in particular because of the nature of the Boko Haram war against the people of Nigeria. Though Abdulazeez is now attempting to dissociate the sect from much of the violence that has brought the northern parts of the country to heel, claiming that criminal and political Boko Haram were behind some of the violence, it is a fact that the sect itself had in the past claimed responsibility for bombing places of worship and remorselessly indicated its proselytising mission to subject about a half of the country to Sharia rule.

    However, I acknowledge that the poignancy of my suggestion that the sect be defeated, both because of its incendiary objectives and its cruel and divisive methods, has been considerably blunted by the scorched-earth methods deployed by the Joint Task Force (JTF) in fighting the insurgency in the region. This column had in recent months drawn attention to the complaints by Borno Elders against the indiscriminate use of force by security agents and the extra-judicial killings that have become a part of the war against the sect. As the latest Amnesty International (AI) report on the crisis shows, the Nigerian government’s unorthodox approach to pacifying the region has led to massive human rights violations. But rather than investigate the Borno Elders’ and Amnesty’s claims, the government has appeared to connive at the unlawful means employed by the JTF in tackling the crisis.

    The sect is probably right to say that much of the violence taking place in the Northeast is inspired by forces outside the control of the original Boko Haram. Having set the genie loose, however, the sect’s leaders have proved unable to rein in the renegades who carry out killings in the name of the sect. This ubiquitousness of the sect and its look-alikes, apart from weakening their control, may also have partly convinced the sect’s original leaders that in the end both their goals and the control they so earnestly desire to exercise may even prove difficult to sustain in the long run. The fact is that violence in the region is spiralling out of the control of any group, whether of the real Boko Haram or of the fake Boko Haram, including out of the hands of those who are suspected to be the sponsors of the sect. And as much as the people would have loved to cooperate with the JTF to help end the menace, the security agencies have themselves virtually completely alienated the local populace by their hostile and spiteful methods.

    The Boko Haram offer may be curious and dishonest, but it is even more unlikely that they sought the approval of those whose names they have haughtily put forward to represent the government side in the negotiations. Gen Muhhamadu Buhari would of course not agree to by pigeonholed by the sect, for he is smart enough to know that whatever he undertakes in the search for peace would be misconstrued and even used against him both now and in the future. Already, his party, the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC), has spurned the mediatory offer to the general to be a part of the negotiating team. He is unlikely to accept the offer even if it came from the government itself.

    Though I have long advocated that the sect be defeated, I do not see that prospect happening anytime soon. The reason is that the security agencies have alienated the local populace, carried out extra-judicial killings, and generally fought the terrorists with unremitting brutishness. The crisis will naturally continue to spiral. Worse, there is a high possibility that the government’s repressive tactics will gradually turn the hearts of the people towards Boko Haram, especially if the sect cleans up its act, fights those it describes as criminal and political Boko Haram, and shows more consideration to the local populace and sensitivity to their plight. To prevent this from happening, the military authorities must urgently reorganise the fighting forces in the region, insist that officers adhere scrupulously to the rules of engagement, and openly punish every infraction by undisciplined soldiers.

    Given some of the recent high-profile killings in the Northeast, many of which were carried out by unknown gunmen, I believe the saddened elders and people of the region would welcome and back concrete and sensible initiatives to bring the violence to an end. The killing of the distinguished civil war general, Muhammadu Shuwa, is a case in point. The government must not think it has all the time in the world, or that the longer the war goes on the more likely the sect would run out of steam. The fear in some quarters is that the longer the war, the higher the chance that one careless killing, whether normal or extra-judicial, or whether inspired by government security agencies or Boko Haram itself, could push the country over the cliff.

    Boko Haram has made its own suggestions, as dishonest as the sect may seem. Let the government, which has so far proved incompetent in fighting the menace or finding a way out, also come up with its own initiative to bring the insurgency to an end, re-establish peace, more importantly enthrone justice, which it appears incapable of, and begin the process of rebuilding the blighted Northeast and extirpating the reasons that provoked the rebellion in the first instance. Certainly, we do not have all the time in the world.

  • Amnesty report on Boko Haram under attack

    Amnesty report on Boko Haram under attack

    The Amnesty International Report has come under attack for accusing the Federal Government of human rights violations in its handling of the Boko Haram insurgency.

    The international human rights organization, in a reports accused the country’s security agents, the military and the police particularly of extra judicial killings, rape and torture in the fight against Boko Haram, adding that the action spurred the very uprising they were meant to stop.

    But reacting to the position of the rights body, veteran lawyer and politician Chief Maxi Okwu described the report as lacking in merit, pointing out that it was a clear demonstration of bias in favour of the terrorist.

    Chief Okwu, founder and one time presidential candidate of the Citizen Popular Party, said the Amnesty International report on the country’s security situation tends to give a boost to the atrocious activities of the sect’s militants whom he said have committed worse human right violations crime in the country than what the security agents are being accused of by the organization.

    He said: “I do not see the rational behind the reports which obviously is not a true representation of the situation on ground, I can’t comprehend the yardstick of criteria employed in arriving at the conclusion.

     

    Okwu, who spoke on a telephone interview, said it is laughable that the Amnesty international is accusing the security agents of violating the human right of thirty members of the sect in a country where hundreds of thousands of civilians and security personnel were killed by the sect.

    He said “ it is an obvious fact that hundreds of thousands of civilians have been killed in churches while worshipping their Gods by gun men and wondered why the amnesty group was silent on this high profile killing.”

     

  • JTF making Boko Haram insurgency worse – Amnesty

    JTF making Boko Haram insurgency worse – Amnesty

    Human rights abuses committed by Nigeria’s security forces in their fight against Islamist sect Boko Haram are fuelling the very insurgency they are meant to quell, Amnesty International said on Thursday.

    Boko Haram said it wants to create an Islamic state in Nigeria and its fighters have killed hundreds in bomb and gun attacks targeting security forces, politicians and civilians since launching an uprising in 2009.

    Reuters says the sect has become the No. 1 security threat to Nigeria.

    The Amnesty report said the Joint Task Force acted outside the rule of law and their brutal tactics could build support for Boko Haram outside its extremist core.

    A Nigerian military spokesman contacted by Reuters rejected the report as “biased and mischievous.”

    “The cycle of attack and counter-attack has been marked by unlawful violence on both sides, with devastating consequences for the human rights of those trapped in the middle,” said Salil Shetty, Secretary General of Amnesty International.

    “Every injustice carried out in the name of security only fuels more terrorism, creating a vicious circle of murder and destruction.”

    The report is likely to add to calls for Nigeria’s military to change its heavy-handed approach to tackling the insurgency, which critics have long said is driving desperate youths into the arms of Boko Haram.

    It details cases of abuses stretching back to the start of the Boko Haram uprising in 2009.

    The report said a “significant number” of people accused of links with Boko Haram had been executed after arrest without due process, while hundreds were detained without charge or trial and many of those arrested disappeared or were later found dead.

    “People are living in a climate of fear and insecurity, vulnerable to attack from Boko Haram and facing human rights violations at the hands of the very state security forces which should be protecting them,” Shetty said.

    Amnesty said it had spoken to witnesses who described seeing people who were unarmed and lying down with their hands over their heads shot at close range by soldiers.

    In one case, a widow described how soldiers put a gun against her husband’s head three times and told him to say his last prayers before shooting him dead. They then burnt down their home. She now fends for her seven children alone.

    Defense spokesman Colonel Mohammed Yerima said that Nigerian forces only kill Boko Haram suspects during gunfights, never in executions.