The National Coordinator of the
Coalition of Northern Politicians, Academics, Professionals and
Businessmen, Dr. Junaid Mohammed, has blamed the Federal Government and
the Northern Elders’ Forum for the breakdown of talks on amnesty for
Boko Haram.
Speaking on Boko Haram’s rejection of Federal Government’s amnesty offer, the Second Republic lawmaker told SUNDAY PUNCH
that the members of NEF were interested in using the opportunity to get
money from the Federal Government, adding that they were not
representing the North.
He said, “Now that the whole exercise
has collapsed, let the Federal Government and the so-called northern
elders tell us what the next step will be. In fact, there was no step at
all; both the Federal Government and the so-called northern elders have
been insincere about dialogue and amnesty right from the beginning.
“There was no way it would have worked
because the whole thing was about these so-called northern elders, who
are agents of the Federal Government, getting money from the government.
They don’t represent anybody in the North but themselves.”
Mohammed further queried NEF’s move of trying to negotiate on behalf of Boko Haram members.
He said, “These so-called northern
elders are people who have not won any election before, and are so
unpopular among northerners. They do not have influence and they want to
negotiate on behalf of Boko Haram. You cannot negotiate with people you
don’t know. You cannot negotiate on the pages of the newspapers and on
electronic media.
“The North has a population of about 80
million people and about 72 per cent of the country’s landmass. So, it
is very vast and no set of people can wake up and claim to represent the
North. If want you want to negotiate, you have to reach out, with
sincerity of purpose, to people on ground, who have some influence in
their constituencies. The amnesty talks couldn’t work because Boko Haram
members do not respect members of the Northern Elders’ Forum.”
When contacted, spokesman of the NEF, Dr. Paul Unongo, said Mohammed was wrong about their intention in the amnesty talk.
He said, “I know Junaid Mohammed and I
find it difficult to believe that he said that, because he knows that
some of us are idealistic and noble people. We didn’t say we are
politically elected to represent the North.
We just said we are elders and people
who have served this country and we are sincerely making our
contributions towards solving the problem. And in doing so, we have
reached to various groups and people in the North, including Junaid
Mohammed himself. We play the politics of building and bringing people
together, not that of abuse, we so will not join issues with anybody.”
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