Editorial
FG, Boko Haram Dialogue: Need For Caution
The expression of willingness by members of the Boko Haram sect to engage in dialogue with the Federal Government as basis to end their dastardly acts against the Nigerian State albeit, with conditions, has tended to raise more dust than hopes in Nigeria.
The group, in a recent widely reported telephone Press Conference in Maiduguri, addressed by one Abu Mohammed Ibn Abdulazeez who claims to be the second-in-command (Amir) to their leader Abubakar Shekau insisted amongst others, that for it to end hostilities completely, government should compensate its members and rebuild their places of worship destroyed during the 2009 uprising.
Abu Abdulazeez further quoted as insisting that all their members who were arrested and put under the custody of security agencies must be released with immediate effect, and all their wives who were displaced following the crisis as well as their children be rehabilitated into the society.
The group further named, as mediators some Northern elders among them, Dr. Shettima Ali Mongono, former Head of State, General Mohammadu Buhari, former Yobe State Governor, Buka Abba Ibrahim, Ambassador Gaji Galtimari and Barr. Aisha Alkali Wakil and her husband and insisted that the planned talks must hold outside Nigeria, preferably in Saudi Arabia.
Abu Abdulazee also announced that the group had chosen five masked members, including himself, Abu Abas, Sheikh Ibrahim Yusuf, Sheikh Sani Kontogora and Mamman Nu to represent them to bring an end to the protracted orgy of violence in Nigeria.
The leader of the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) and former Military Head of State, Maj. Gen Muhammadu Buhari (rtd) has since declined the offer and frowned at the appointment to represent Boko Haram, a group whose ideals he said, he has never approved of.
The Tide agrees that dialogue of any kind is a potent weapon in conflict resolution but what a group like Boko Haram can best understand, judging by its modus operandi and antecedents, is fire for fire. Besides, what would be the issues for dialogue when their grievances were not canvassed.
On the other hand, we expect that before any dialogue commences, answers should be provided for emerging questions such as: why the Sect wants to hold the dialogue in far away Saudi Arabia? Why should anyone believe that they represent the group and why present such laughable conditions before the dialogue.
The Tide agrees that there is no harm in reconciliation as the government exists for the good of all Nigerians, but reconciliation with any group that has wasted the lives of more than 3,000 Nigerians and caused the nation so much pain and agony must not be on their own terms.
The call for dialogue by the Boko Haram Sect should at best be seen as an expression of repentance that should be encouraged, but in doing so, the Federal Government must be very cautious and mindful of the fact that the Nigerian State was not responsible for their mis-adventure in the first place.
As a group made up of people committed to the propagation of Islamic teachings and Jihad, the dialogue presents very little hope for a secular Nigeria. Similarly, they lack the moral authority to make any claim on the Nigerian State. Instead, they owe the nation both apology and prayer for forgiveness.
The Tide appeals to Nigerians to give room for the dialogue when the conditions are dropped to give members the opportunity to perhaps confess and ask for forgiveness and also provide a platform for the eventual disarming of the insurgents and not to make any form of concession.
We commend the progress being made by the security agencies in the fight against terrorism in Nigeria. Indeed, the call for dialogue by the insurgents, may not be un-connected with successes being recorded by the military in its efforts to end the menace and we urge them to do more.
We note with joy the decision of the former Head of State, Buhari to publicly dissociate himself from such a murderous group. It will do this country a lot of good if the northern leadership and indeed the people will stop finding explanations for the senseless killing of innocent Nigerians and join in the process of ending the violence and reclaiming Nigeria.
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