Identify Boko Haram Members – FG Asks Northern Leaders
The Presidency on Sunday replied the growing band of northern leaders
asking for amnesty for members of the violent Islamic sect, Boko Haram, asking the leaders to first identify and talk to those to be granted amnesty.
It said it behoved the northern agitators to identify members of the sect before asking the government for amnesty.
The Presidency also warned them not to turn the Boko Haram issue to a north versus south case.
“They (those calling for amnesty for Boko Haram members) should
identify the people and talk to them before posing a challenge to
government to grant them amnesty,” spokesman for President Goodluck
Jonathan said in an interview with our correspondent on Sunday in Abuja.
Since the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Sa’ad Abubakar, asked the
President to grant members of the sect amnesty, a demand that Jonathan
has rebuffed because he said he could not grant amnesty to ghosts, there
have been more voices from the north asking the Federal Government for
amnesty for boko Haram members.
Just on Friday, the Northern Traditional Rulers Council urged the
Federal Government to reconsider its stand and offer amnesty to members
of Boko Haram and other violent Islamic sects who are willing to embrace
peace and reintegration into the larger society.
The call came as a resolution that emerged from the council’s meeting held at the palace of the Sultan.
In a statement issued by the coordinating secretary of the council
and Emir of Kazaure, Alhaji Najib Hussaini Adamu, the group comprising
traditional rulers from across the North called for decisive action from
the Federal Government to curb the “unfortunate escalation of
insecurity in the country.”
Abati said it would be “wrong and mischievous” for anybody or group
to see the Boko Haram menace and the call for amnesty as a North versus
South issue.
He said the matter was a national issue that required everybody,
including those calling for amnesty, to rally round governments at all
levels to solve.
He said, “The first issue to be made clear is that it is wrong and
mischievous to term the Boko Haram saga and the call for amnesty a North
versus South issue.
“The concern of government is to ensure peace and security in all parts of the country, not regional or ethnic matter.
“In saying that he can’t grant amnesty to ghosts, the President made
it clear that if members of the sect come forward to lay down their arms
and list their grievances, government will listen to them.
“With that declaration, the President threw a challenge to leaders in
the affected places: local, political and traditional leaders. They
have the responsibility to join hands with government by making efforts.
They should identify the people and talk to them before posing a
challenge to government.
“To move the country forward is a collective responsibility. They
should stop sloganeering. Rather than attacking government, they should
support the government.”
Abati also warned those who hold positions of responsibility to
always refrain from making inflammatory remarks that are capable of
compounding the insecurity in the country.
He said a state governor claimed publicly that the SURE-P was
concentrating its projects in a part of the country at the expense of
the North, saying such a statement was unbecoming of a person occupying a
position of high responsibility like a state governor.
Kano State Governor Rabiu Kwankwaso was quoted on Saturday to have
said that some Federal Government’s policies were largely favourable to a
particular section of the country at the expense of the North’s
economic and political interest.
“A situation whereby NDDC is working for a particular region, a
ministry entirely dedicated to serve a particular region and so many
resources invested in the SURE-P project are directed towards a
particular part of the country is not in the best interest of all
Nigerians,” Kwankwaso was quoted as saying while receiving members of
the Arewa Consultative Forum’s executive council during the group’s
visit to him.
The Kano State governor argued that a lot of the challenges currently
facing the country today had been caused by the uneven distribution of
resources among all sections of the country by the government, lamenting
that even appointments and political patronage are not as balanced as
they should be.
But Abati said contrary to Kwankwaso’s claim, SURE-P’s projects cut across all parts of the country.
He said the programme of the SURE-P was a public document that is open for all to see.
Identify Boko Haram Members – FG Asks Northern Leaders
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