Govt must dialogue with Boko Haram, says senator
A senator has told the Federal Government that there is no solution to
the Boko Haram insurgency except dialogue with the sect. According to
Senator Abba Bukar Ibrahim, who was twice governor of Yobe State –
which, along with Borno, is the epicentre of the activities of the sect –
it will be difficult to fight and defeat the sect. Boko Haram has claimed
responsibility for bombings in which about 3,000 people have died. The
sect’s men have bombed churches, public institutions and
telecommunication masts. The government’s plan to go into dialogue with
the sect was aborted because “the group is faceless”. The sect set
conditions for the dialogue.
It named prominent Nigerians,
including Senator Ibrahim and former Head of State Gen. Muhammadu
Buhari, as mediators. It also proposed Saudi Arabia as venue of the
talks. Boko Haram (western education is a sin) said it wanted to
islamise Nigeria. Ibrahim told reporters in Abuja yesterday that the
government should be committed to dialogue with the sect. The member of
the Board of Trustees of the All Nigeria People Party (ANPP) insisted
that fighting the sect cannot stop the insurgency. He insisted that the
reason for the actions of the sect is inequality, neglect and injustice.
“These are fundamental issues, which every country should really
embrace in order to have a permanent peace,” he said.
The
senator vowed to do everything possible to ensure that peace returns to
the country especially to the North, if the government is serious about
dialogue. “My advice to the Federal Government is, when a situation like
this arises anywhere in the world, you cannot fight and defeat this
kind of thing by force, so, dialogue, I believe, is the best solution.
Yes, they (Boko Haram) are faceless but I believe there must be a way,
if government is totally committed to finding a away out. “We can find a
way really, to help dialogue with this group; after all, they are all
Nigerians at least, as far as we know; even if there are foreigners, but
obviously, the vast majority of them (sect members) must be Nigerians.
The fundamental thing is anywhere you see this kind of thing rearing
its ugly head, it is a product of inequality and injustice. These are
fundamental issues, which every country should really embrace in order
to have a permanent peace. “When you go to the Northeast geopolitical
zone, you’ll know, nobody need to tell you that this is the most
neglected, the most marginalised part of this country as of today. Of
course, all zones have at one time or another complained about
marginalisation, but for the current situation we’re in now, the
Northeast is terribly neglected, marginalise and nearly completely
abandoned.
Senator Ibrahim again denied having any contact
with the group. He said: “I don’t know them. I don’t know anybody who
knows the Boko Haram physically, and as you’ve rightly said, they are
not even in one group; they seem to be divided. So, whichever group or
faction that has decided that there should be dialogue in Saudi Arabia,
what I’m saying is that through the Saudi Arabian government, the
Federal Government can get to these people; it may not be direct as
they’ve refused to come out for Nigerians and Nigeria’s government to
know them.”
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