An alleged member of the radical Islamist sect Boko Haram
set conditions Thursday for peace talks with Nigeria’s government,
asking that negotiations to end its bloody guerrilla fight be held
outside of the nation and that a former military ruler be involved.
The demands came during a telephone conference call with local journalists in Maiduguri, the city in northeast Nigeria
that once held the sect’s main mosque and has suffered the brunt of its
violence over several years of shootings and bombings. However, whether
the offer represents a clear call for peace from the group remains
unclear, as its command and control structure remains a mystery and the
call for talks came from a member unknown by the media until Thursday.
The man, who identified himself as Abu Mohammed Ibn Abdulaziz, said
the peace talks must be held in Saudi Arabia and involve former military
ruler Muhammadu Buhari. The man said those were conditions set by
Abubakar Shekau, Boko Haram’s leader.
“We are not actually challenging the state, as people are saying, but
the security (forces) who are killing our members, children and wives,”
the man said in the call. “We are highly offended but if this
government is sincere, everything (the attacks) will come to an end. We
want to dialogue but government must show sincerity in its handling of
the situation.”
The man also said that authorities also must arrest former Borno
state Gov. Ali Modu Sheriff as a precondition for talks, as well as
compensate sect members whose family members have been killed.
Imprisoned sect members also must be immediately released, the man said.
The call came through the channels that Boko Haram
usually communicates with journalists, who gathered at the local office
of the Nigeria Union of Journalists to listen. However, Abdulaziz spoke
entirely in English, which is unusual for the sect. Also, journalists
ordinarily hear from a spokesman who uses the nom de guerre Abul Qaqa in
such calls. The man also did not call for the implementation of Shariah
law across Nigeria, a multiethnic nation of more than 160 million
people. That long has been a demand of the sect.
It is also unexpected for the sect to ask specifically for Buhari as a
negotiator. Buhari, who came to power in January 1984 and was deposed
in August 1985, ruled Nigeria country with an iron fist. However, he is
popularly viewed across Nigeria’s north as an honest man and has been a
perennial presidential candidate since the country became a democracy.
Yinka Odumakin, a spokesman for Buhari, could not be immediately reached
for comment Thursday.
Rumors about indirect peace talks between Nigeria’s government and
the sect have floated around for some time. In March, the government
thought a possible mediator could be Datti Ahmed, a Kano physician who
heads a prominent Muslim group, the Supreme Council for Shariah in
Nigeria.
However, Ahmed publicly backed away from the suggestion that he be a mediator out of security concerns.
Officials representing Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan have
claimed several times in recent weeks that the government is in indirect
talks with Boko Haram. However, a Sept. 30 Internet video featuring
Shekau shows him repeatedly denying that the group is in peace talks
with Nigeria’s weak central government and promising more attacks.
Boko Haram, whose name means “Western education is sacrilege” in the
Hausa language of Nigeria’s Muslim north, has been attacking government
buildings and security forces heavily over the last year and a half.
This year alone, the sect is blamed for killing more than 720 people, according to an Associated Press count.
The violence caused by Boko Haram, and the heavy handed response by
Nigerian security forces, has drawn increasing international scrutiny. A
Human Rights Watch report in October accused Nigerian security forces
and Boko Haram of likely committing crimes against humanity in their
fighting. An Amnesty International report released Thursday made a
similar claim and alleged that the Nigerian government is illegally
holding hundreds of people suspected of participation in Boko Haram
violence in inhumane conditions and without access to lawyers. [AP]
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