Governor
Kashim Shettima of Borno State has restated his call for amnesty for Boko Haram
insurgents who are willing to drop their arms and embrace peace.
He said the recent attempt by 16 Boko Haram
members to renounce “the murderous ideology is one key proof that an amnesty
programme targeted at creating an exit window for forcefully conscripted
members is capable of reducing the number of Boko Haram fighters.”
Shettima restated the call at an interactive
session hosted by his Special
Adviser on Communications and Strategy, Mallam
Isa Gusau, with a select group of journalists in Abuja.
Shettima’s call, according to Gusau, was
scientific and has been vindicated by a very desperate effort of Boko Haram
leaders to stop their fighters from leaving their fold when a group of 16
members renounced the sect’s ideology in Borno State following which they were
slaughtered by the sect’s leaders.
“Governor Kashim Shettima was misunderstood by
many Nigerians when in his May 29 inaugural remarks he revisited his stance on
the need to apply a political solution to fighting the Boko Haram by way of
granting a window to admit those willing to surrender their arms and renounce
the Boko Haram ideology.
“Shettima has held this position from his
campaign days ahead of the 2011 elections for his first term. He had always
advocated a combination of three approaches, military which is what we have in
place, an economic approach to provide jobs for people and discourage citizens
that Boko Haram terrorists are recruiting.”
According to Gusau, the numerous arrests that
were made by the military have shown that the economy plays a vital role in
breeding insurgency.
Speaking further, Gusau said: “It is important
to note that the governor has always advocated that the three approaches should
be applied together, not exclusively. However, the amnesty issue has been the
controversial one. The governor is not really talking about dialogue as a
start, what he is advocating is to create an opening for those ready to abandon
the sect to be able to do so freely, so that the sect can be broken.
“He is very particular about hundreds, if not
thousands of members that were conscripted or forced to join the sect and
become killers against their wish. If attacks on all communities can be
efficiently done, then there wouldn’t be need for any debate on amnesty but we
all have seen that many communities have continued to suffer from these attacks
because the communities are so much, not only in Borno but round Nigeria and we
don’t have the right proportion of security personnel to secure all
communities.
“When insurgents attack communities, they
mostly target male youths, they arrest them and guard them into bushes. In most
cases, even before taking them out of the towns they attacked, they preach in support
of their ideology with promises of heaven for adherents and then openly ask
aloud if any of the youths wanted to join them or not and whoever said he
wasn’t ready to join them, they slaughter him right there sometimes in the
presence of his parents or they lay them on row and shoot all of them in matter
of seconds targeting their skulls as killers walk round, we have seen many of
these instances in videos recorded in Gwoza and other parts of Borno State.
“Now, what Governor Kashim Shettima has been saying
is that hundreds of these forcefully arrested and initiated young men may want
to run away and drop their arms and there should be a policy and programme to
admit them so that insurgents lose members and their strategy of arresting
youths and forcing them to join them which is what they apply in sustaining
their membership, can be deflated and I think the governor’s call on May 29 has
been vindicated less than two weeks ago.
“You might have read it on most news platforms
that on Friday, July 3, 2015, Boko Haram insurgents beheaded 11 of its members
who renounced their ideology.
“According to accounts by some locals, what
happened was that some members of the sect who are indigenes of some villages
in Damboa Local Government Area indicated interest in abandoning the ideology
but most of them were afraid of the consequences. Out of them, 16 summoned
courage to renounce the ideology and they moved to Miringa village in Biu local
government area of Southern Borno.
They wanted to join some residents of villages
like Ajigin and Talala in Damboa who have been taking refuge in Miringa due to
reccurring attacks on the two villages by insurgents. The 16 insurgents went to
Miringa on Friday, July 3 according to locals, then at night, commanders of
Boko Haram sent a team to Miringa to fish out the 16 members that denounced the
sect.
The team went from house to house and got the
16 members intact, they didn’t fire any shot in order not to attract soldiers,
they took the members out of Miringa and slaughtered 11 of them and went away
with five. The bodies of the 11 executed members were found the following day
while the other five were not seen.”
(THEWILL)




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