The Presidency has insisted on talks with the Boko Haram sect, contrary to the denial by a spokesperson of the group.The denial according to Presidential spokesman, Dr Reuben Abati, might be coming from one of the faction groups.
One Abu Muhammad, who claimed to be the second in Command to the sect
leader, Abubakar Shekau last week denied any talk with representatives
of the federal government,
stating that the earlier press statement
confirming a dialogue with the federal government was false.
The presidency also said that there was nothing to worry over the issue.
Reacting on the controversy, the Special Adviser to the President
(Media and Publicity) assured that President Goodluck Jonathan is
tackling the issue through the multi-faceted levels.
The presidential media aide however revealed that the said dialogue
is not the conventional talks where both members sit at a table.
He noted that government has adopted the back room channels at reaching the members of the Boko Haram sect.
“When government says it is already talking to Boko Haram, the form
of that dialogue must be properly understood. I think a lot of people
are under the impression that the dialogue involves a situation whereby
government officials are sitting on one side, Boko Haram persons are
sitting on the other side in an air-conditioned room and there are
negotiations across the table.
“That is not the form of the dialogue. The form of the dialogue is
that back room channels are being used to reach across with the sole
objective of understanding what exactly the grievances of these persons
are, what exactly can be done to resolve the crises, in the overall best
interest of ensuring peace and stability in Nigeria and the security of
life and property.
“And all of this is consistent with the position of Mr. President. So
what is called dialogue is at many levels: through back room channels
and through multi-level, constructive interventions to address a
difficult issue that is multifarious.”
Abati further stated that “one thing that is noteworthy is that the
Boko Haram spokesperson made it clear that they were prepared to go a
step further to ensure that persons who are using the name of Boko Haram
for political and criminal purposes are identified and checked.
“What that original statement indicated was that indeed Boko Haram
has many faces. It confirms that this thing called Boko Haram is such a
multifaceted phenomenon.
“The true situation has already been stated by the Honourable
Minister of Information on two different occasions. First in an
interview, second through a press release, namely that the Federal
Government is involved in dialogue with Boko Haram.
“You will recall that what led to this is that a spokesperson for
Boko Haram issued a statement confirming that government and some
leaders of Boko Haram were already discussing; in that particular
statement the issues being looked at were clearly identified.
“You will recall that in one instance, during a Presidential Media
Chat, President Jonathan had made it clear that the Boko Haram
phenomenon, the terror phenomenon in Nigeria, is quite a novel
phenomenon and that many of the persons involved in the low level
insurgency are not known, they have not come forward. However if such
persons should come forward, government will grant them a listening ear
to know what it is that they are after. Again the President is on
record, as having made it clear that government’s approach to checking
the Boko Haram insurgency is at many levels.
“The available option according to Mr President is not solely one of
military action or police action and it is on the basis of this that he
had reached out to leaders of political thought in the parts of the
country that are affected.
“It is on this basis that President Jonathan held a lot of meetings
with politicians from the Northern states. Because his position is that
look, this people, yes they may not come forward but they are not
ghosts, they live in communities. They are members of the Nigerian
community, there would be persons who know them. There would be leaders
in these communities, in these villages, in these towns who may have an
idea and such persons needed to be carried along to assist in addressing
the Boko Haram issue. When government adopts this approach, it does
not mean government is abdicating its responsibility to ensure that
persons who go against the law are sanctioned.
“There is even a third level of intervention, the economic and social
level of intervention. In this regard, President Jonathan has made it
clear that many of the efforts being directed towards the affected parts
of the country are meant, in fact to redirect the energies of the
youths and this is the whole point of using the agricultural sector to
transform lives, to create wealth, to create a value chain, the end of
which is to create jobs and to engage young people more effectively.
This government has a robust agricultural transformation programme that
has been justly praised by IFAD and the World Bank.”
Abati also said “the Jonathan administration has been providing wider
opportunities for many of the youths in the affected parts of the
country to be able to go to school. No other government before now has
done as much. Get them off the streets, engage them meaningfully and
then o f course you know that the government introduced the You Win
programme, and several other pro-people initiatives and policies.
“So, this is the issue at this stage, but one thing you should also
note is that the Boko Haram as has been admitted, even by its
spokespersons, is a phenomenon that has mutated. So it is not unusual
that you will find a situation whereby a variant of the mutation may
express a view that sounds like it’s contradicting the other. What is
certain is that government is considering all of this, government is
taking on the issue frontally and through back room channels, with the
assistance of a number of persons who have an understanding of the
sociology and the character of the problem.
“You must admit of course that a lot is being achieved. Within the
last one year and more, you can see that a lot has changed in terms of
the knowledge that has been gained about the nature and character of the
problem. A lot has been done, and a lot has been achieved in terms of
the capacity of the state to deal with the problem. What President
Jonathan is asking for as his government tackles this issue from the
various dimensions that we have identified, the political, the economic,
the social and also, law enforcement, what he calls for, what he
demands from Nigerians is support.” Abati stated
Culled: The Nation
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