The head of the Supreme council for Sharia in Nigeria, Datti Ahmad, has turned down his appointment into a 26-member committee announced by the Federal Government on Wednesday to dialogue with members of the Boko Haram sect with a view to granting them amnesty in turn for disarmament.
Speaking
to the Hausa service of the BBC on Thursday, Mr. Ahmad said he turned
down the appointment because of his past experience in dealing with the
government on the issue of Book Haram.
The
cleric had been approached by the federal government after the
insurgent group agreed to have him as a mediator. He, however pulled out
during the mediation process.
“Firstly,
I declined my appointment because on the two occasions we tried to risk
everything and intervene with a view to ending the insurgency, the
federal government wasn’t sincere. When approached (Boko Haram), they
gave two conditions upon which successful dialogue will take place,” he
said.
The
conditions, Mr. Ahmad said, were that the federal government should
release all their wives and children in detention, while the second one
was for the government to put a stop to the gross abuse of human rights
in Borno and Yobe States.
Mr. Ahmad said the government agreed to these demands but later reneged.
He
said that he only saw his appointment into the committee on the pages
of newspapers. The Islamic cleric added that he is sure the government
is also not sincere this time, going by the leadership of the 26 man
committee.
“The
chairman is a serving minister, while the secretary is also a civil
servant, so they may end up lying in the report because they will feel
obligated to tell the government what it wants to hear,” he said.
Mr. Ahmad’s refusal of the appointment follows that of Kaduna-based activist, Shehu Sani.
Mr.
Sani had after the government made the announcement on Wednesday
rejected the appointment; saying he had written and spoken extensively
about how to solve the crisis and that government only need to refer to
his earlier opinion on the matter.
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