Northern elders, yesterday, broke their silence on the slamming of
state of emergency on three states, describing the action of President
Goodluck Jonathan as an indirect declaration of war on Northern Nigeria.
The President’s action, which took the northern elders by surprise,
came barely three weeks after Jonathan accepted a roadmap from the
Northern Elders Forum, NEF, on how to end the Boko Haram insurgency.
The elders had successfully impressed upon the Presidency to raise
the Boko Haram committee to dialogue with the sect to restore elusive
peace to the region.
Jonathan, who met with the NEF leadership in Abuja in April,
subsequently inaugurated the Turaki-led committee with a mandate to
broker peace with the sect and compensate their victims within a
two-month time frame.
However, after inaugurating the panel, the sect leadership rejected
the amnesty offer, saying that it was the government that should seek
amnesty for having killed its Muslim brothers.
But irked by continuous bloodletting in several parts of the north,
President Jonathan on Tuesday called on the armed forces to move into
the states of Borno, Yobo and Adamawa, arrest suspected terrorists and
restore peace in those places.
Many reports indicated that soldiers armed with armoured tank were
already on the ground in the affected states preparatory to take out
terrorists from their strongholds scattered in the North Eastern part of
the country.
But a spokesman for the NEF, Prof Ango Abdullahi, who relayed the
position of the group, told Vanguard that they were disappointed by the
sudden change of tactic by Jonathan on how to resolve the crisis in the
north.
Abdullahi said: “It is very sad to see that the President has easily
changed direction from dialogue and reconciliation to war in his bid to
end the cycle of violence in the north.
“The volte-face by Jonathan amounts to undermining our agreement with
him on peace and reconciliation and we are disturbed that he has opted
for force rather than peace to end the violence.
“What the President has done has now justified the fear of those who
rejected membership of the Boko Haram amnesty committee on the suspicion
that he was not sincere in setting up the panel and that it was
programmed to fail so as to justify military action against the north.
“We hereby call on the President to immediately disband the so-called
Boko Haram amnesty committee, as there is no need to continue to waste
public funds on a matter, whose purpose has been deliberately truncated
by the very person who initiated it.
The NEF has lately been mounting opposition against Jonathan’s
re-election bid in 2015, insisting that it is their turn to occupy the
top post.
Vows to truncate Jonathan’s 2015 presidency
The group has vowed to wrestle power from Jonathan in 2015 by
presenting a candidate that would defeat the President at the polls.
At a meeting with the Borno State Governor on Tuesday, the NEF stated
that they had what it takes to produce the next President of Nigeria
and they would seek to do just that.
Though Jonathan has not openly declared his intent to run, his
kinsmen and foot soldiers have been threatening there would be war if he
is dumped at the poll.
The Presidency is yet to condemn or distance itself from the strident
calls by various Ijaw groups and individuals in the Niger Delta for him
to be re-elected or for Nigeria to break up.
vanguard

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