Governor Abdullahi Ganduje of Kano State
has urged the Federal Government to be cautious in its negotiation with
the Boko Haram sect.
The governor, who was fielding questions
from State House correspondents in Abuja on Friday, expressed fears that
the government might end up dealing with a fake faction of the militant
sect.
He said, “I hope when we negotiate with them, we are negotiating with the correct people.
“Experience has shown that the group has so many factions and if we are not lucky, we may be dealing with the wrong faction.”
In
a related development, lawyers in separate interviews with one of our
correspondents, expressed diverse views over President Muhammadu
Buhari’s expressed willingness to grant amnesty to Boko Haram in
exchange for the kidnapped Chibok schoolgirls.
While some lawyers were in support of the
move, others expressed pessimism over the offer of amnesty to the
insurgents for releasing the over 200 girls who were kidnapped on April
14, 2014.
A civil rights lawyer and social
commentator, Mr. Wahab Shittu, identified this time when the Nigerian
military appears to be gaining momentum in the fight against Boko Haram
as the right time for the government to negotiate with them.
He noted that Nigeria “must ensure it negotiates from a position of strength and not that of weakness.”
He said, “It is the right time because
ultimately no matter how prolonged any crisis is, the combatants will
get to a negotiation table.
“The primary purpose of any government is
the security and welfare of its citizens and if on that score
government because of one life decides to negotiate, it is okay because
any life lost cannot be replaced.”
Another civil rights lawyer, Mr. Liborous
Oshoma, who also supported the move however called on the government to
get to the roots of the insurgency to prevent other people from taking
up arms against the state in the future.
He said, “Anything that will lead to the
release of those girls, that is if they are still together, is welcome.
This is not the first time that government is even attempting to use the
carrot and stick approach and it is good that the government is not
saying that it is going to fold its arms and beg them to come and take
amnesty.
“It should be as bait to get to the
sponsors of the group. Government should address the root cause of the
Boko Haram crisis because if that is not addressed, another group will
spring up in the future. It is better to rehabilitate these people than
to leave them to continue on this rampage of killing innocent people.”
Mr. Jiti Ogunye, another lawyer, however,
noted that it would be dangerous to grant amnesty to Boko Haram on the
basis of the release of the Chibok girls if the group has not renounced
violence.
He therefore described Buhari’s invitation to the group as bait. He said, “They have not repudiated their satanic ideology so if the
Chibok girls were released for example and they are granted amnesty on
that score, what happens next? Will they stop blowing up people and all
that?”
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