Top hierarchy of the Nigerian military, Nigerian Tribune gathered on Sunday, is expressing worries as to the possibility of a faction of the Boko Haram sect playing the spoiler role in the ceasefire deal.
This was as a result of series of
attacks traced to members of the sect in Abadam and Dzur, Borno State
communities, on Saturday and the attack on Shaffa, another town in the state,
by the suspected members of the sect on Sunday, leaving about 19 people dead.
Nigerian government announced on
Friday that it had agreed a ceasefire with Boko Haram, but the sect has not
confirmed the truce and since the announcement, there have been, at least, five
attacks – blamed by security sources on the insurgents.
Analysts said the sect is divided
into various factions who, although using the same name, are driven by
different aims.
Some, it was gathered, are motivated
by internal politics, while others appear to have ideological links with other
Islamist extremists such as al-Qaeda.
A source said the military was
afraid that the Boko Haram leaders needed to act fast to save the integrity of
the ceasefire, especially following attacks on Borno villages on Saturday and
Sunday.
“There are fears of a faction of
Boko Haram threatening the ceasefire accord. But the government believes their
leaders would keep their words,” a source said.
The sect reportedly killed no fewer
than 30 civilians around Gwoza town and another five in Abadam Local Government
Area of Borno State recently.
Nine persons were also reportedly
killed in Dzur and Abadam between Friday evening and Saturday morning, as they
were jubilating over the ceasefire.
The Boko Haram sect attacked Shaffa
village of Hawul Local Government Area of Borno State for the second time in
less than one month and killed about 19 people.
According to resident of the town,
the sect attacked and killed eight villagers along the Zhur forest, before they
headed to Shaffa town, where they clashed with vigilante, leaving eight members
of the insurgents and three locals dead.
The town came under attack barely 48
hours after security operatives raided the town and arrested seven suspected
members of the sect, said to be indigenes of the area.
Meanwhile, details emerged on Sunday
as to why the 219 Chibok girls abducted by Boko Haram insurgents will not be
released in one fell swoop, as sources confirmed that the students were
distributed to no fewer than five African countries spread between West and
Central Africa.
It was learnt that the death of
Bokon Haram leader, Abubakar Shekau, had left a hole in the leadership
hierarchy, with some commanders not showing faith with the central command.
Sources close to the administration,
however, insisted that the commanders of the sect, who wrote the Chadian
President, Iddris Derby, over the ceasefire deal, were sincere enough and that
could handle the factions.
It was gathered that trainers of the
sect had link with Chad, a reason they contacted the Chadian president, picking
him as the intermediary to the deal.
It was learnt that the Federal
Government’s delegation to the negotiations with Boko Haram and Chadian
authorities was kept as top secret, though the team met for weeks.
Sources said in Abuja on Sunday that
the release of the Chibok girls was the major demand of the Federal Government,
which was then followed be a demand for cessation of violence against Nigerian
villages.
It was learnt that the government’s
team accepted the excuse by Boko Haram’s commanders that the girls were already
spread in, at least, five West and central African countries and that it would
be difficult to get all of them together.
“The Boko Haram leaders told the
delegation that the girls cannot be released in one fell swoop and that was
acceptable, because they explained that the girls are already in, at least,
five African countries.
“They said the girls are in good
health and are not being kept in the forest as initially insinuated. It was
learnt that some of the girls are in Chad, Niger, Cameroon, Central Africa
Republic, while only a handful are kept in a location in Nigeria,” the sources
said.
It was, however, gathered that the
first batch of the girls could be on their way home as early as tomorrow.
Meanwhile, as negotiations continue
today in Chad, a top military source revealed to Nigerian Tribune that there is
hope for the release of the girls today.
The source also said the Federal
Government was already aware and set to meet some of the conditions set by the
terrorists to enhance the release of the girls.
Coordinator of National Information
Centre, Mr Mike Omeri, who confirmed this, said “the discussions are
essentially in relation to the general insecurity in the North East and also
the need to rescue all captives of the terrorists, including the students of
Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok.”
Nigeria is, however, “inching
closer” to securing the release the schoolgirls, despite fears that reports of
a ceasefire with the Islamist militant group have not come to fruition.
Omeri, on Sunday, said “I wouldn’t
want to speculate about a date – it could be next week or the week after – but
we’re inching closer to securing the release of the girls.
“We will have further meetings next
week. There’s no conclusion, but there is a general understanding on which
basis a ceasefire was reached.”
Omeri said discussions would include
what happens to those who lay down their arms.
“There are members who want things
like jobs, anything that will give them a start in life, because not all of
them are truly convinced by Boko Haram’s ideology,” he added.
On the ceasefire agreement reached
by the terrorists and the military, the source said so far, the military was
maintaining its part.
The source said the military was not
ready to make any statement until later in the week, after examining response
to the ceasefire agreement.
The North in a shambles –Shettima
Borno State governor, Kashim
Shettima, has called on northerners, irrespective of religion and tribe, to
summon courage and come together, to salvage the country in 2015.
Shettima said the North, in the best
of times, was the least in all indices of economic development, adding that now
that insurgency was ravaging some of its parts, “we are now the poorest of the
earth.
“Poverty has no religion, it has no
ethnicity, therefore, we must reach out to other parts of the country, so that
by 2015, other Nigerians can join forces with us to salvage the country.”
He spoke in Kaduna at a meeting
organised by the All Progressives Congress (APC) at the weekend.
“The North is in a shambles.
Citizens have become refugees in their country. There is the need to bury our
differences and become united to confront the challenges ahead,” he said.
Fear Of Boko Haram Factions Threatens Ceasefire
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Monday, October 20, 2014
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