Borno state governor Kashim Shettima
has turned down an award from an Europe based non-governmental organization, International Advocacy for Peace Negotiation &
None-violence after being nominated for the award on Wednesday following
his success of achieving ceasefire via dialogue with Boko Haram.
The Governor humbly rejected the offer, which the NGO said in a letter dated 30th January, 2013 and addressed to Shettima that his ‘resilient and determined role in brokering a cease fire deal with Boko Haram as well as his pioneering and consistent calls for dialogue’ merited him the award’.
Governor Shettima said such award may be a welcome idea, even as he described it as ‘hasty, biased and unnecessary’.
In the award letter signed by one Mr. Russell Donvito, who is the Coordinator of the NGO, Governor Shettima was supposed to be presented with the award in far away Brussels by March, 2013.
Russel’s letter reads in part; ‘we remember you making that proposal to the media in April, 2011, as the Governor of Borno State, being the centre of the insurgency.
We have been closely monitoring your (Shettima) actions and statements about peaceful resolution, we have also confirmed from our local based partners how you have been committed and meeting different people including detained insurgents, courting and persuading them to give links for negotiation.
We belief that negotiations must start from somewhere, you cannot have all armed guys to turn in overnight, you must start from someone however low or big so long as he is of that group.
It is for these and much more, including your bold submission in Washington in 2011 before the US military, calling for dialogue with the Boko Haram when most other speakers couldn’t say, that we think you should be singled out for honouring at no cost whatsoever, by the advocacy.
Justifying his boss’ action in an interview, Governor Shettima’s spokesman Isa Umar Gusau, said the Governor did not reject the award but ‘humbly and politely feels that the award is to , “hasty, biased, diversionary and extremely selective because so many people, key security chiefs, establishments and groups at the national and state levels are actually involved in whatever successes gradually being achieved and these people and groups are still working day and night to achieve peace for Borno and Nigeria”’.
Gusau added that Governor Shettima feels that the award recipients should be those who lost their lives to the violence, those who have become orphans and widows, those who have lost breadwinners and everyone that stood or continuously work for the return of peace in Borno and the rest of the country’.
The Governor humbly rejected the offer, which the NGO said in a letter dated 30th January, 2013 and addressed to Shettima that his ‘resilient and determined role in brokering a cease fire deal with Boko Haram as well as his pioneering and consistent calls for dialogue’ merited him the award’.
Governor Shettima said such award may be a welcome idea, even as he described it as ‘hasty, biased and unnecessary’.
In the award letter signed by one Mr. Russell Donvito, who is the Coordinator of the NGO, Governor Shettima was supposed to be presented with the award in far away Brussels by March, 2013.
Russel’s letter reads in part; ‘we remember you making that proposal to the media in April, 2011, as the Governor of Borno State, being the centre of the insurgency.
We have been closely monitoring your (Shettima) actions and statements about peaceful resolution, we have also confirmed from our local based partners how you have been committed and meeting different people including detained insurgents, courting and persuading them to give links for negotiation.
We belief that negotiations must start from somewhere, you cannot have all armed guys to turn in overnight, you must start from someone however low or big so long as he is of that group.
It is for these and much more, including your bold submission in Washington in 2011 before the US military, calling for dialogue with the Boko Haram when most other speakers couldn’t say, that we think you should be singled out for honouring at no cost whatsoever, by the advocacy.
Justifying his boss’ action in an interview, Governor Shettima’s spokesman Isa Umar Gusau, said the Governor did not reject the award but ‘humbly and politely feels that the award is to , “hasty, biased, diversionary and extremely selective because so many people, key security chiefs, establishments and groups at the national and state levels are actually involved in whatever successes gradually being achieved and these people and groups are still working day and night to achieve peace for Borno and Nigeria”’.
Gusau added that Governor Shettima feels that the award recipients should be those who lost their lives to the violence, those who have become orphans and widows, those who have lost breadwinners and everyone that stood or continuously work for the return of peace in Borno and the rest of the country’.
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