The Department of State Services,
DSS, has denied being the source of the information credited to Australian Boko
Haram hostage negotiator, Dr Steven Davis, describing him as “a self-styled and
self-appointed negotiator.”
Deputy Director, DSS Public
Relations, Marilyn Ogar, nevertheless said the body was investigating Davis
claims and has invited former Governor of Borno State, Ali Modu Sheriff to
answer some questions bordering on the fresh allegations linking him with the
sponsorship of the dreaded Islamic sect, Boko Haram.
However, the department said it
couldn’t be true that the immediate past Chief of Army Staff, COAS, Lt. Gen.
Azubuike Ihejirika was a financier of the deadly Boko Haram, saying it would be
wicked of anyone to link him with the sect.
Davis had listed Sheriff and
Ihejirika as Boko Haram sponsors.
Ogar, spoke in Abuja while parading
the alleged co-mastermind of the Nyanya blast, Sadiq Ogwuche, along with other
suspects, Ahmed Abubakar, Muhammad Ishaq, Yau Saidu, Anas Isah and Adamu Yusuf.
But Ogwuche, the alleged mastermind
of the bloodiest bomb blast at the El-Rufai Motor part Nyanya, denied any
link with Boko Haram and involvement in the deadly explosions which
killed over 100 peoples and injured many others.
While dismissing the allegations by
Davis on Azubuike Ihejirika, the DSS spokesperson said, it was “uncharitable
for Nigerians to reward someone who laid down his life, to associate him with
the sponsorship of the sect.”
She said it was through the doggedness
of the military under Ihejirika that insurgents were dislodged from the major
cities like Okene, Kano to the Sambisa forest and that “it is wicked of anyone
to link him to the sponsorship of the sect.”
On the former Borno State
governor, Ogar said, “Sheriff has been invited twice and he has been
invited again (over his alleged sponsorship of Boko Haram). Investigation is
ongoing to review every aspect of Davies allegations.”
She also noted that contrary to
claims by Davies that the CBN official who handled the funding of Boko Haram,
is an uncle to three of those arrested in connection with the Nyanya bombings,
none of the six suspects in the agency’s custody was related to another.
“In other words, none is a cousin or
nephew to any other and only two suspects namely Yau Saidu and Anas Isah have
ever lived together at the makeshift clinic called ‘Kishi Clinic’ operated by
Rufai Tsiga, a co-mastermind of the bomb blast who is still at large,” she
explained.
She added that further interrogation
of suspects indicated that none lived with or has any relationship with any
staff of the CBN, noting that the clarification was necessary to correct the
erroneous impression in the media.
I’m not Boko Haram member
But Ogwuche, who was repatriated to
Nigeria from Sudan recently, denied being a member of Boko Haram. He stressed
while speaking in an interview with journalists that he had no hand in the
Nyanya bombings as he was in Sudan at the time of the incident.
The suspect, however, admitted to
have donated N30,000 to widows of Boko Haram members through Tsiga, who had
been declared wanted for his roles in the Nyanya blast.
On his deserting the Nigeria Army,
Ogwuche said that he did it in order to go and study Arabic in Sudan even as he
admitted receiving lectures and taking demonstrations with a Jihadist group in
Britain before he came back to Nigeria to which he blamed for his arrest by the
security operatives earlier. According to him, “I am not a member of Boko
Haram and I don’t know anything about the Nyanya blast. I deny it because I was
studying in Sudan when the incident happened.”
Nigerian Security Services Disowns Davis, Australian negotiator, Says He is self-appointed
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Saturday, September 06, 2014
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