Tag: Mama Boko Haram

  • JUST IN: Mama Boko Haram sentenced to five years in jail for fraud

    JUST IN: Mama Boko Haram sentenced to five years in jail for fraud

    The Borno State High Court in Maiduguri has sentenced Aisha Wakil, popularly known as Mama Boko Haram, to five years imprisonment for fraud.

    Ms. Wakil was convicted alongside two officials of her non-governmental organisation, Complete Care and Aid Foundation—Tahiru Daura, the Programme Manager, and Prince Shoyode, the Country Director.

    This was confirmed by Dele Oyewale, Head of Media & Publicity at the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), on Monday.

    The EFCC, which prosecuted the case, revealed that the verdict was delivered on Thursday, November 28, by the trial judge, Aisha Kumaliya.

    The defendants were accused of defrauding Bukar Kachalla, the owner of Abks Ventures, by dishonestly inducing him to part with a Toyota Camry 2012 model worth ₦6 million, which they neither paid for nor returned.

    Read Also: Mama Boko Haram, two others jailed for N40m fraud

    Count two of the charge reads: “That you, Aisha Alkali Wakil, Tahiru Saidu Daura and Prince Lawal Shoyade whilst being Chief Executive Officer, Programme Manager and Country Director respectively of Complete Care and Aid Foundation (Non-Governmental Organisation) sometime between October and November 2018 at Maiduguri, Borno State within the jurisdiction of this Honourable Court, dishonestly induced one Alhaji Bukar Kachalla of Abks Ventures Limited to deliver to you a Toyota Camry 2012 Model worth N6,000,000.00 (Six Million Naira) only under the guise of executing a contract for the purchase of the said car and thereby committed an offence contrary to Section 320 (a) and punishable under Section 322 of the Penal Code Cap 102 Laws of Borno State.”

    The defendants pleaded “not guilty” to the charges prepared against them by the EFCC.

    During the trial, counsel for the prosecution,  Mukhtar Ahmed and Shamsudeeb Saka presented three witnesses and tendered several documents as exhibits before the court in proof of EFCC’s case against the defendants.

    Justice Kumaliya, thereafter, convicted and sentenced the defendants to five years imprisonment without an option of fine each.

    The Judge further ordered the defendants to jointly and severally restitute the balance of N3.5m to the petitioner or in default, serve an additional five years jail term each.

  • Mama Boko Haram, two others jailed for N40m fraud

    Mama Boko Haram, two others jailed for N40m fraud

    The trio of Aisha Alkali Wakil (a.k.a Mama Boko Haram) Tahiru Saidu Daura and Prince Lawal Soyade were yesterday convicted and sentenced to 10 years imprisonment by the Borno State High Court, sitting in Maiduguri.

    They were jailed by Justice Umaru Fadawu.

    The defendants were jailed upon being arraigned by the Maiduguri Zonal Command of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), on March 5, 2020 on a two-count charge bordering on conspiracy and obtaining by false pretense to the tune of N40 million, spokesman for the commission, Dele Oyewale, said yesterday.

    Count two of the charge reads: “That you Aisha Alkali Wakil, Tahiru Alhaji Saidu Daura and Prince Lawal Shoyade whilst being the Chief Executive Officer, Programme Manager, and Country Director, respectively of Complete Care and Aid Foundation, (a Non-Governmental Organisation) and Saidu Mukhtar (at- large) sometime in Maiduguri, Borno State within the Jurisdiction of this Honourable Court did with intent to defraud obtained the sum of Forty Million Naira (N40, 000, 000.00) from one Bashir Abubakar, the Chief Executive Officer of Duty Free Shop Ltd under the false pretence of executing a purported contract for the supply of Five (5) X-ray Machines 1900 with Solar Energy which you knew to be false and thereby committed an offence contrary to Section (1) 1 (b) of the Advance Fee Fraud and other Fraud Related Offences Act, 2006 and punishable under Section 1(3) of the same Act.”

    Read Also; Food inflation a global phenomenon – Bwala

    The defendants pleaded “not guilty” when the charges were read to them.

    Prosecution counsel, A.I Arogha, presented four witnesses and tendered seventeen exhibits before the court.

    Consequently, Justice Fadawu convicted and sentenced them to 10 years imprisonment for the offense of conspiracy.

    The court further sentenced the defendants to 10 years imprisonment for the offense of obtaining by false pretense and ordered them to jointly and severally pay the sum of N40 million to Bashir Muhammad.

    “The prison term shall run concurrently on the expiration of all prison terms imposed on the convicts by any court”, the Judge said.

    The convicts’ journey to the Correctional Centre began when a petitioner alleged that they swindled him through a purported contract for the supply of five X-ray Machines 1900 with Solar Energy to a Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO), Complete Care and Aid Foundation, worth N40 million. They neither supplied the machines nor returned the contract sum to the petitioner.

  • ‘I slept like a baby the first day I used a sanitary pad’

    Hajara bursts out of the crowd of women and ran briskly to her house down the middle of the Village. Almost with the speed of light, she rejoined her fellow women in the group she left a short while proudly holding her sanitary pad to the admiration of all.

    Though some of the women smiled at her with envy, others were genuinely happy and proud of one of their own privileged to discard their age long practice and embrace the modern technique of managing menstrual period.

    For the benefit of our readers, Hajara’s action was only to prove a point to this writer who had gathered the women from Wadai Village, one of the remote villages from Nguru Local Government in Yobe State and inquired to know if any of them ever saw a sanitary pad.

    Read Also:Women lawyers cheer up IDPs in Benue

    Quite frankly, the challenges the rural women in Nigeria  faced in managing their menstrual circle and the age long practices of using rags, leafs and in some cases sand-powder  is appallingly unacceptable.

    Recently, the Executive Director Complete Care Foundation, Barr. Aisha Wakil popularly known as Mama Boko Haram has also given her voice against the despicable practices and the conditions of the women and the need to address the issue.

    Bar. Wakil through her NGO has embarked on hygiene promotion and education of women IDPs in Borno State at the Displaced Peoples Camps to achieve this noble objective. The story is however changing with serious outputs translating to significant impacts in many rural communities in northern Nigeria.

    Bar. Wakil, during an advocacy visit to Emir of Kano, Alhaji Lamido Sanusi, said: “One of the effects of insurgency is that women and girls are using sand and ashes in place of sanitary pad for their menses and this is unhygienic and unhealthy for women and girls.

    “Menstrual pad is a luxury for poor women in Borno. Strange as it may sound but poor women and girls in community and IDP camps are still using rags filled with sand, or ashes as an alternative for sanitary napkins during their menstrual period, thus exposing themselves more to vaginal infections,” Mama Boko Haram said.

    The story of Hajara and some other rural women in Yobe communities is just a tip of the iceberg of one of the success stories of the impact the hygiene promotion campaign UNICEF has carried out in some rural communities in the State.

    Narrating her encounter with the new hygiene and health practices, the 41yr old housewife of seven children said she no longer have issues of itching and infections around her private part since she started using the modern sanitary pad.

    Hajara recalled the first day she used a modern sanitary pad. Her story is merely a graphic picture of what many rural women have faced for years which she succinctly described as years of darkness and ignorance.

    At 40, Hajara she has battled with leafs, rags soaked with ashes powder to manage her menses until five years ago when she was introduced to the world of a modern sanitary pad.

    “Sometimes you never understood you are in the dark until light shines on you. For us, using leafs, rags and sand was the only thing we knew in the past. Sometimes we don’t use anything at all. We were careless about our health without any serious consideration until UNICEF opened our eyes. We are in the light now. With the use of the pad, you even forget that you are menstruating. I first day I used this(pointing to the sanitary pad in her left hand), I slept like a new born baby that has just been breast fed by his mother,  Hajara recalled.

    Hajara says her husband supports her from time to time in providing the pad anytime she could not afford to get one.

    “My husband normally gets it for me from time to time when he goes to the market. I am so grateful for the support he has been giving to me,” she disclosed.

    Explaining on how she was able to win her husband’s heart in accepting the practice, Hajara said, “I think my husband understands that if I am well, it will be beneficial to him and our entire household as well. The same thing if I am not healthy it will affect him too. I convinced him to understand the importance of the use of the pad after we were educated by the UNICEF people and he accepted it with his whole heart,” she said.

    Ari’am Modu is 25 years with three children. She has embraced new hygiene practices brought to the local community. Her testimony though not reflected on one of her children in her arms as flies feast on his unkempt nose flowing with cough. She however admitted that she has imbibed the culture of bathing and oiling her children not less than three times in a day, as well as avoiding to dress them with dirty clothes.

    Haruna Maigari is the village head of Wadai. According to him his community has seen the wisdom to embrace the new hygiene and health practices brought to them by UNICEF, just as they have given every support to women in the community to learn and accept everything they are been taught.

    The women in the community get all the support needed for the healthy development of their community,” Maigari said.

    Hajiya Hauwa Liman is a thorn in the flesh of rural women in Bulturi Village, another remote settlement in Nguru Local Government Area. The sight of Hauwa Liman always send cold shivers in the spines of the women especially those that failed in their duties to keep their houses clean.

    Hauwa Liman is a Community Hygiene Promoter whose Job title is to ensure the cleanliness of the women and the entire community.  For her to deliver in her mandate, she was trained by UNICEF officials on hygiene and sanitation. I was eager to meet her as the boys ran to inform her of my visit. Curiously, my expectations were met as Hauwa appeared from the north-eastern corner of the village dressed in her clean red hijab and walked towards me as we exchanged warm pleasantries.

    Narrating her story not difficult to her at all. She informed me that the job has earned her respect and enemies in the early period she began but all that has changed.

    “It was really a big challenge when we first started but Alhamidilah we have over-come some of the problems.  From the beginning it was difficult for the women to embrace the changes. Some even see me as a nuisance to them but I kept on pushing and never relented. I am happy that today, I can proudly say that most of the women in Bulturi if not all understand the importance of keeping their environment clean, taking care of their children, taking care of their personal hygiene. It is truly rewarding for us as a community,” Hajiya Hauwa informed.

    According to Hauwa, her job has been made easier because of the cooperation she enjoys from her fellow women who have quickly adapted to the hygiene practices of the training they have acquired from UNICEF officials.

    One of the women from the community, Zainabu confirms that the fear of Hauwa is the acceptance of basic hygiene practice.

    Every woman in the community knows her with what she does. If Hauwa comes visiting in your house and your children are dirty, your name is sorry. She will make sure that you do the right thing. Some women go into hiding on the sight of Hauwa,” Zainabu informed.

    Falmata Maigari, is the wife of the Village Head of Bulturi Village. Together with Hauwa, the duo have stood firm to ensure that the women in the village keep to the new hygiene practices brought by UNICEF in their community.

    “We are the custodians of this community. The children are ours. We have to put in our best to make sure they are healthy. I never knew before but these people (apparently referring to UNICEF) people have come to open our eyes so we are now healthier than we use to be. Many families here no longer go to the hospital because of the way we take care of our children and ourselves now”, she explained.

    As the wife of the village head, Falmata told me that together with Hauwa, they have formed a formidable team to make sure those women that comply with better hygiene practices are rewarded though not with money but praises while the less performing ones are encouraged to do more.

    “We make sure that women that take care of their households are commended while those that are found wanting are encouraged to step up their game.

    Huawa  go from house to house  to teach the women  about basic  hygiene practices like: hand-washing with soap and water after using the toilet, before eating, how to take care of your body, keeping  your environment clean inside and outside.

    We have realized that our personal cleanliness is very important if not people will get bad things in their food that will cause illness. Since we started this, all the small small sickness has vanished among us. Nothing like cholera in our communities again, ”  Falmata explained.

    In an encounter with the Chairman of Nguru Local Government, Hon. Alhaji Ali Maidami , he was short of words to express his gratitude with the manner that UNICEF has transformed rural communities to become even more free from diseases than in the urban areas.

    According to him, “the structures put in place for the sustenance of the projects is what excites me. Most of the structures that UNICEF has put in all the projects and program executed in our rural communities have very solid sustainable plans. This is because they have trained our rural people in the management of the projects.  This will help us to build on that even after they must have left. Our joy to UNICEF and our Governor Ibrahim Geidam is immeasurable.

    “Our rural communities are now living a heathier life than people living in urban areas. Most of the communities in my local government have been declared free from open defecation courtesy of the work carried out by UNICEF. This is quite commendable,” Maidami said.

    Senior Local Government Facilitator UNICEF-WSSSRP for Nguru Local Government, Lawan Mohammed informed that the baseline survey for hygiene and sanitation for Nguru and Bade was very low but shot up after the intervention from UNICEF.

    It was not easy getting the people to accept and observe these basic hygiene practices. We kept on pushing and gradually we have come to this point. In Nguru LGA, we are working in 144 communities and 75 of them have been declared Open defecation Free (ODF). In Bade, out of 132, 63 are ODF,” Lawan informed.

  • Mama Boko Haram Aisha Wakil raises hope over Dapchi girls

    Mama Boko Haram Aisha Wakil raises hope over Dapchi girls

    The Barnawi faction of Boko Haram has contacted human rights activist, Mrs Aisha Wakil, admitting it has in its custody the Dapchi schoolgirls who were abducted last week.

    The sect also hinted that the girls might be released.

    Wakil, popularly called Mama Boko Haram on account of her closeness to many of the sect members ,said yesterday that the Abu Musab Al-Barnawi faction called her on Thursday to confirm that it is keeping the girls.

    She told  the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that the  abductors told her  that the girls were safe, healthy and in good condition.

    She did not say how many of the girls are with the terrorists, although the Federal Government  put the number of the missing girls  at 110.

    The sect had called her following an earlier interview she granted PRNigeria in which she pleaded with  the abductors to release the girls to enable them to be reunited with their families.

    She said in that interview that she was ready to sacrifice her life to rescue the girls.

    Wakil said: “They were even the ones that called me, and said Mama we heard what you had said and told me that they were with the girls and they were going to release them.

    “I begged of them and said please let this not be another 1,000-plus days of Chibok girls, and they laughed and said no.

    “I asked them where I can come and stay with them (girls) for two days, but they did not say anything.

    “I can assure Nigerians that so far they are with my son, Habib (Abu Musab Al-Barnawi), and his friends.

    “Habib is a nice guy; he is a very nice boy. He will not harm them; he will not touch them; and he will not kill them.

    “He is going to listen to us, and so far, he indicated interest that he loves peace. And I love them for that and believe what they said on this.

    “They will definitely give us the girls. All I am begging Nigerians is to calm down, be prayerful, everything will be over.”

    The activist had, at various times, participated and played key roles in negotiations between the military authorities and Boko Haram insurgents’ commanders, which facilitated the release of numerous abductees from terrorists’ captivity.

    She  was a member of the Dialogue and Peaceful Resolution of Security Challenges Committee in the northern region set up during the President Goodluck Jonathan era.

    Al-Barnawi is the first son of the late founder of Boko Haram, Mohammed Yusuf.

    Yusuf died in police custody following a 2009 military crackdown on the sect in Maiduguri.

    The militant  group, Islamic State (ISIS), in August 2016  appointed Al-Barnawi as the head of Boko Haram, a decision which was vehemently rejected by Abubakar Shekau.

     

  • Mama Boko Haram begs Al -Barnawi to release abducted Dapchi girls

    Mama Boko Haram begs Al -Barnawi to release abducted Dapchi girls

    A former member of Committee on Dialogue and Peaceful Resolution of Security Challenges in the North, Barr. Aisha Alkali Wakil (a.ka. Mama Boko Haram) on Tuesday asked the Abu Musab Al-Barnawi-led faction of Boko Haram to release the 110 girls abducted from the Government Girls’ Science Technical College, Dapchi.

    Wakil’s appeal followed fresh lead that the Al-Barnawi faction had been operating along Yobe State axis and might have abducted the girls.

    Al-Barnawi (named Habib at birth) was said to be the son of the late founder of Jamā’at Ahl as-Sunnah lid-Da’wah wa’l-Jihād (now known as Boko Haram), Mohammed Yusuf, who was killed in police custody on July 30, 2009.

    Following irreconcilable differences on Boko Haram’s modus operandi, Al-Barnawi parted ways with the sect.

    But Wakil, a North-East human rights activist with strong links with Boko Haram, spoke with PRNigeria in Maiduguri, Borno State, and urged Al-Barnawi to spare the girls.

    According to PRNigeria, the activist who cried profoundly said:  “This thing that is happening, is really breaking my heart. These children don’t even know what they are doing. Some of them were not even born at the time this thing started.

    “Wallahi I will go after them, even if it will take my life to save these girls. They call me Mummy, but they don’t listen to me.

    “I keep on talking to them, begging them to lay down their arms and embrace peace but they will say ‘Insha-Allah mummy we are going to stop.’ Sometimes they will say they are scared they are going to be killed but I will tell them nobody is going to kill you.”

    “I heard you are now being called ‘Abu Mussad Al-Barnawi’ but I know you as Habib and I am begging you to stop the killing and abduction.

    “I have sent many messages to you. I don’t know if you are getting these messages or you just chose to continue to hurt your mother and make her cry.

    “Dear Habib, Nuru and others, I was told you may be the ones responsible for the kidnap of these girls. Where ever you may be if you are listening to me, I beg you in the name of Allah to release the girls back to their families.

    “What type of children will continue letting their mother to continue crying. Dear Habib, I pray Allah touches your heart and that of your colleagues to stop what you are doing. “

    She pleaded with Al-Barnawi to come out and lay down his arms alongside his members.

    She added: “Please come out. I will never deny you even if the whole world did. Those who know you know your heart. They know you are no longer interested in the fight anymore.

    “I will hold all of you and wrap you with my wrapper and bring you out and no one is going to shoot you. If they will shoot you, they will have to shoot me first. I don’t mind sacrificing my life if you will stop what you are doing.  If I die to stop Boko Haram, I know I will go to paradise.”

    The PRNigeria said the female “activist was reported to have helped in the circumcision of some kids over two decades ago who later became Boko Haram members. Her relationship with the sect members earned her the name ‘Mama Boko Haram.’

    “Disturbed about the latest abduction of 110 students of Government Girls Technical College Dapchi, Aisha has renewed her commitment to help end the Boko Haram insurgency.

    “Respected by many in her community, Wakil has been actively involved in efforts to end Boko Haram through her NGO “Complete Care and Aid Foundation” aimed at restoring peace to the North East by rehabilitating the youth against warped ideologies that mislead them to join the terror group.

  • Mama Boko Haram renews pledge to de-radicalize insurgents

    Mama Boko Haram renews pledge to de-radicalize insurgents

    After going silent for sometimes, Barr. Aisha Wakil alias Mama Boko Haram is back in the news again.

    Wakil has renewed her commitment to fight to end the Boko Haram insurgency with the lunching of her NGO Thursday in Maiduguri.

    The NGO – Complete Care and Aid Foundation, according to Wakil is expected to provide a free feeding centre, fight drug abuse and substance addiction, De-radicalization, sex hawking, human trafficking, female genital mutilation and de-worming among the displaced people in Borno State and beyond.

    The launch which took place at the Women Development Centre in Maiduguri was chaired by the former chairman Kondoga Local Government and former Senator Borno Central, Kaka Malam Yale, with Dr. Mari Gubio as the guest Speaker of the occasion.

    The Guest Speaker, Dr. Mari Gubio described Wakil as a woman who almost lost her life in attempt to achieving peace at the heat of the Boko Haram insurgency in Borno state.

    He called on people to give maximum support to Complete Care and Aid Foundation, stressing that, “I am confident that Barr. Aisha Wakil is one personality that can do a lot of things for her NGO. I say this because we have been through this struggle together and I can vouch for her integrity. At a point she has to sale even her assets to provide care for Boko Haram victims in the state.

    “I am sure that if she is fully supported by well-meaning individuals within the state and outside, she will make a big impact in solving the problems of Boko Haram in the state,” Dr. Mari said.

    Dr. Mari also used the occasion to caution the activities of some unscrupulous INGOs and NGOs operating in the state, while calling on the people to be mindful of the assistance they get from some of the humanitarian actors operating in the state.

    He regretted that level of destruction that the Boko Haram insurgency has inflicted on the people of Borno State, adding that the people must take responsibility and rise above the challenges of the crisis to reclaim their land.

    In his addresss, Gov. Kashim Shettima who was represented by the Commissioner for Poverty Alleviation and Youth Empowerment, Hajiya Ina Galadima said, the birth of the NGO is coming at the right time when Borno is in dire need of partners to curb the problems attendant from Boko Haram insurgency.

    Gov. Kashim directed the NGO to immediately draw out MoUs and strategic partnership with relevant ministries in the state with the full support of the Government of Borno State.

    Earlier while explaining in detail some of the projects to be executed by the Complete Care and Aid Foundation, the Vice Chairman of the Foundation, Prince Lawal Shoyode said the Foundation will embark into massive farming activities that will create job opportunities for the teaming youth of the state and establish bakeries to will take care of the free feeding program, adding that, their foundation has formed strong synergy with the tricycle riders in the state and the NDLEA to fight drug abuse across the state.

    Over 3 million naira was realised at the lunching.

  • Army: why we want Mama Boko Haram, others 

    Army: why we want Mama Boko Haram, others 

    The Army yesterday explained why it took long to declare Aisha Wakili, popularly known as ‘Mama Boko Haram’; a journalist, Ahmed Salkida; and Ahmed Bolori wanted.

    Director of Defence Information Brig.-Gen. Rabe Abubakar said the three were invited to “shed more light on the Boko Haram insurgency since they know what we do not know”.

    Abubakar was delivering a lecture, “Media-Military relationship in the fight against insurgency”, in Abuja yesterday, during the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) Correspondent Chapel 2016 activities to mark its one year in office.

    Gen. Abubakar explained that the military was not just out to declare people wanted, urging people not to be sentimental about the three people declared wanted.

    His words: “The military in the last seven years has been engaged in the fight against insurgency; a lot has happened and we are calculating as whatever we do or planning to do is not just for doing sake, it must have some national interest.

    “We cannot just declare people wanted; it is for a purpose. The more sentimental you become, the more you hinder investigation.

    “Just as we released whoever was innocent in the past, we are not arresting them but inviting them to shed more light.”

  • Stop seeking cheap popularity, group tells Salkida, others

    Stop seeking cheap popularity, group tells Salkida, others

    A civil society group under the aegis of Stand Up Nigeria (SUN), has asked journalist, Ahmed Salkida who has close link with Boko Haram to stop using his contact with the sect to seek cheap popularity.

    Salkida and two others, Ahmed Bolori and Aisha Wakil also known as Mama Boko Haram were declared wanted by Nigerian army in connection with the missing Chibok girls on Sunday.

    Bolori and Wakil (AKA Mama Boko Haram) have since reported to the Nigerian Army in an effort to clear their names from been linked with Boko Haram.

    Addressing a press conference on Tuesday in Abuja, SUN’s Executive Director of Communication, Arubi Justina, said the use of close links with Boko Haram by the above named persons to seek popularity was condemnable.

    “Such antics must be condemned by professional bodies which any of the trio is claiming affiliation to,” she said.

    According to her, even if the trio had genuinely started out as professional journalist, negotiators, activists or any other occupation, they have since crossed the threshold of professionalism to become terrorists’ sympathizers who revel in supporting killers.

    She stated that Salkida has overstepped his journalistic boundaries, saying if he has no affiliation with the insurgents, he would have as a matter of national security divulge the information available to him to security agencies.

    According to her, these wanted persons were behind the series of Boko Haram negotiation scams that cost Nigerians billions of naira under former President Goodluck Jonathan.

    She said: “Since they were declared wanted, these Boko Haram collaborators have taken to the media in their usual fashion in attempts to create public outrage against the military in the hope that this could be used to blackmail their way out having to give accounts for their relationship with the world’s most despicable terror group. They have immediately embarked on a media campaign to the effect that they are ready to appear before the army; that they have contributed and made so much sacrifice towards containing Boko Haram or securing the release of the girls; or that they are being persecuted.

    “Similarly, their fellow members in the intellectual wing of Boko Haram had desperately tried to paint the trio as victims; paint Salkida as a journalists being vilified for his doggedness and the other two as genuine negotiators.

    “Stand Up Nigeria therefore call on Nigerians, human rights activist, journalists and online community to shun any extension of solidarity to the trio of wanted Boko Haram sympathizers. Salkida, Wakili and Bolori have at different times confessed to knowing more than the ordinarily in terms of her association with Boko Haram.”

    She urged the Nigerian Army not to be distracted from their conventional military business, saying they are trying to use negative media to blackmail the Army and the Federal Government in a ploy that is as despicable as their association with Boko Haram.

  • Mama Boko Haram, Bolori surrender

    Mama Boko Haram, Bolori surrender

    Hours after they were declared wanted, Mrs Aisha Wakil aka Mama Boko Haram, and a lawyer, Ahmed Bolori, yesterday surrendered to the military.

    Mama Boko Haram reported at the Defence Headquarters (DHQ) in Abuja; Bolori turned up at the Army Headquarters in Maiduguri, the Borno State capital, at 10am.

    The third person declared wanted with them, Ahmed Salkida, a journalist, said he was also ready to give himself up, but asked for a ticket from the military to facilitate his return home from his Dubai base.

    Mama Boko Haram, also a lawyer, said she was not immediately taken in for interrogations when she arrived at the DHQ.

    The front desk officers, she said, asked her what she wanted and she told them she was declared wanted yesterday (Sunday). But the officers said they were not aware of such and she asked them to read the newspapers online.

    “They told me they will go and read and get back to me,” she said, adding  that a few minutes later, a supervisor entered the reception to collect her passport and told her he would return 10 minutes later.

    The spokesman of the Nigerian Army, Sani Usman, confirmed that Mama Boko Haram has submitted herself.

    “I have been reliably informed that she has reported at the Defence Headquarters and she has been directed to the Directorate of Military Intelligence,” Usman said.

    Before giving herself up, Mama Boko Haram had said she was innocent of the allegation against her.

    She said she had told the military what to do to secure the freedom of the Chibok girls but her advice was ignored.

    In a statement posted on Facebook by Dr. Emman Shehu of the International Institute of Journalism, Abuja, she said: “I am Aisha Alkali Wakil. I understand that  the military declared me,  Ahmed Silkida and  Ahmed Bolori wanted for having links with Boko Haram. It’s interesting,  now they believe me?

    “I know the Boko Haram boys. I have been in the front fighting for peace long before Chibok girls were kidnapped. Nigerian security knows me too well, I’m not shady. Why declare me wanted?

    “I have had meetings with the Chief of Army Staff and his people. I told them the way forward, to allow me come with some commanders of Boko Haram and  discuss with them,  but they chose to do things their own way only and never gave considerations to any of my suggestions.

    “I  want to inform the Nigerian people of my innocence and make them realise that I am in constant touch with the security personnel and they know where to find me but I wonder why I had to be declared wanted on national news even mentioning my husband’s name alongside.

    “This has put my immediate and extended family under a lot of pressure and I do not deserve this from the government.

    “Though they may not appreciate all my efforts to proffer peaceful solutions to the menace of Boko Haram, my name should not be dragged to the mud nor my character defamed.”

    Bolori said he was well-treated by the army, with a colonel offering him tea.

    Reliving his encounter with the army since Sunday night, he said: “I have received several calls  that the Nigerian Army has declared me and two others wanted. What kind of system is that where you will be declared wanted without being informed.

    “I don’t know what crime I have committed. Whatever the case, I have contacted  the army to provide a venue and they are yet to respond as expected.

    “Sequel to my efforts to reach and report to them, the Nigerian Army asked me to return home and meet them by 10am on Monday (yesterday).

    “This was after several unanswered  calls and messages I have sent them. May God grant us peace.”

    On arrival at the Army Headquarters, Bolori wrote: “I have signed the visitor’s register since and I am still waiting to be taken in although the army guard doesn’t  have airtime to contact his supervisors.

    “The army is now treating me very friendly and peacefully as a nice colonel just took me to his office to drink tea.”

    Stating his readiness to return home to face the military, Salkida wrote on his Twitter handle, that he has stayed “within the creed of professional journalism,” in all his work and extensive coverage of Boko Haram insurgency since 2006.

    ”Clearly, my status as a Nigerian journalist who has reported extensively, painstakingly and consistently on the Boko Haram menace in the country since 2006 is an open book known to Nigerians and the international community. Equally, my total allegiance and sacrifice to Nigeria is self-evident. I have stayed within the creed of professional journalism in my work.

    ”As a testimony to the credible and professional values of my access, since May 2015, l have been to Nigeria three times on the invitation of Federal Government agencies. I made personal sacrifices for the release of our Chibok daughters.

    ”Finally, the army is aware that I am not in Nigeria at present. In the coming days, I will seek to get a flight to Abuja and avail myself to the army authorities. Indeed, my return will be hastened if the military sends me a ticket.”

     

  • Army declares ‘Mama Boko Haram’, two others wanted

    Army declares ‘Mama Boko Haram’, two others wanted

    The Army yesterday  declared three persons wanted under the Terrorism Prevention Act 2011(as amended), following  Boko Haram’s release of a fresh video in which it restated  its conditions for freeing the Chibok girls.

    Declared wanted are a journalist, Ahmed Salkida, a former Boko Haram negotiator, Hajia Aisha Wakil, and a non-governmental organisation (NGO) promoter, Ahmed Bolori.

    They are accused of withholding information that could unravel the abducted Chibok girls’ location.

    A statement by Army spokesman Col. Sani Usman said:  ”The world is quite aware of the abduction of several persons; women, children and men, including the female students of Government Secondary School Chibok, Borno State by Boko Haram Terrorists group. Consequently, appeal was made for their unconditional release by the Federal Government. The military also made concerted efforts to rescue them.

    “We also appeal to Nigerians that have any information to volunteer to the military or security agencies to enable us rescue them.

    “However, two recent incidents have pointed to the fact that, there are three individuals namely; Ahmed Salkida, (Ambassador) Ahmed U. Bolori and Aisha Wakil that have information on the conditions and the exact location of these girls.

    “Therefore, the Nigerian Army hereby declares the two gentlemen and the lady wanted for interrogation. We are relying on the relevant laws of the land and in particular the Terrorism Prevention Act 2011 (as amended) where Nigerians could be punished for failure to disclose information about terrorists on terrorists’ activities.

    “This become necessary as a result of their link with the last two videos released by Boko Haram terrorists and other findings of our preliminary investigations.

    “There is no doubt that these individuals have links with Boko Haram Terrorists and have contacts with them. They must therefore come forward and tell us where the group is keeping the Chibok Girls and other abducted persons to enable us rescue them.

    “We are therefore calling on all Nigerians and peace loving people to give us useful information on their whereabouts. We are also liaising with other security agencies for their arrest if they failed to turn up,” the statement said.

    Ms. Wakil, a lawyer, was in contact with the government during the 2013 amnesty negotiations with the Boko Haram insurgents.

    She is believed to have met with former President Goodluck Jonathan at the time as part of the negotiation, which later broke down.

    Mr. Bolori is the coordinator of the Fa’ash Foundation and the Partnership Against Violent Extremism (Pave). He is based in Maiduguri, the Borno State capital.

    Mr. Sakilda had said on Twitter that the latest Boko Haram video was sent exclusively to him before the sect uploaded it to YouTube.

    Boko Haram said in the video that it would only negotiate with the Nigerian government through journalists known to be close to it.