Details of Nigeria’s peace deal with
Boko Haram were revealed on Friday by the government of Chad which also
sensationally disclosed that the sect’s leader, Abubakar Shekau, wrote it
confirming his emissaries to the recent peace meeting held in Chad.
Moussa Mahamat Dago, the number two
official in Chad’s foreign ministry confirmed all these to the media on Friday.
The official stressed that Chad believed Nigeria’s secret deal with Boko Haram
Islamists to free more than 200 kidnapped Chibok schoolgirls would go ahead
despite the breakdown of a truce and revealed that the key to the agreement was
a prisoner swap.
The accord mediated by Chad for the
release of the girls seized from Chibok in Borno State in April has been called
into question since it was announced by the Nigerian military last week. A
ceasefire supposed to be part of the agreement has been broken, and a further
25 girls were abducted this week.
Dago, according to Reuters, said it
appeared some Boko Haram factions were refusing to abide by the deal, brokered
by the Chadian foreign minister with two representatives of the Islamist group
and two Nigerian negotiators at meetings in Chad on September 14 and 30.
“Quite possibly those who are
fighting are dissidents that even they (Boko Haram) aren’t able to control. So
far, there is no reason for others to doubt this agreement,” Dago told Reuters
late on Thursday in the Chadian capital, N’Djamena.
“What I can say is that those that
negotiated with the Nigerian government did so in good faith ... We are waiting
for the next phase which is the release of the girls,” he added.
Dago said the two sides agreed
verbally to a series of points summarised in a document he had seen, including
the release of the schoolgirls and of jailed Boko Haram fighters.
“The starting condition of Boko
Haram was the liberation of some of their members ... That is the
compensation,” Dago said, adding that the specifics on the names and number of
Boko Haram fighters still to be released had not yet been agreed.
Dago said he still expected the
girls to be freed, without giving a time frame. The Boko Haram negotiators were
no longer in Chad although they had agreed to return in October after freeing
the girls to hold more talks, he added.
The first stage of the agreement
made was the release of a group of 27 Chinese and Cameroonian hostages by Boko
Haram two weeks ago in northern Cameroon, Dago said.
“We remain optimistic. The two sides
agreed to find a negotiated solution and to show their good faith, they already
freed some hostages and announced a ceasefire,” he said.
Dago admitted it would be
embarrassing for Chadian President, Idriss Deby’s government, which has taken a
leading role in security and diplomacy in Africa’s turbulent Sahel region in
recent years if the girls were not freed.
“It would be very disappointing. We
are engaged in this now. If this negotiation doesn’t succeed, that would be
damaging for Chad’s facilitating role,” he said.
Boko Haram has not yet commented on
the ceasefire. Its fighters have killed thousands of people in raids mostly in
the northeast but have also claimed sporadic bomb attacks in the Federal
Capital Territory.
Dago said he was confident that the
negotiators had the authority to speak on behalf of Boko Haram’s mercurial and
reclusive leader, Abubakar Shekau, whom Nigeria’s military has more than once
claimed to have killed.
“They are envoys who answer to their
leader, Shekau, who himself confirmed that these emissaries spoke on his
behalf. That was confirmed in writing to the Chadian government,” he said,
confirming press reports that the negotiators were named Sheikh Goni Hassane
and Sheikh Boukar Umarou.
Chad does not know where the
abducted Chibok girls are being held, but Dago said it was likely they were
outside of Chad and spread out over a wide area.
The Chinese hostages freed earlier
under the agreement were found scattered across northern Cameroon, he said.
“They (Boko Haram) gave us
guarantees that the girls are well but we don’t know physically where they
are,” he said.
“But they have certainly dispersed
them like the Chinese hostages, who were spread out over a large area,” he
added.
The two parties planned to meet
again for a third time in Chad after the release of the schoolgirls to draft a
roadmap to tackle more fundamental issues, Dago said.
“For the next stage of negotiations,
the girls need to be freed. We cannot go into details as long as this question
remains and it is a requirement of Chad that the girls are released before we
start the next stage of talks,” he said.
Nigerian Tribune
Revealed: Nigeria’s Secret Deal With Boko Haram As Shekau Appointed Negotiators In Writing At Chad
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Saturday, October 25, 2014
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