Bring Back our Girls:NBA to Jonathan: Negotiate with Boko Haram,
Still on the issues of Bring Back Our Girls, the chibok girls that were abducted April 14
yesterday the Nigeria Bar Association urged President Goodluck Jonathan to make use of the option of dialogue with the Boko Haram Islamic sect, with a view to securing the release of over 200 schoolgirls kidnapped in Chibok, Borno State
The association held their committee meeting yesterday in Abuja “There is something called burden of leadership, and it is by choice. Once you have chosen to seek to serve at any level, and more particularly, at the level of the presidency of a great country like Nigeria, with its good, bad and ugly, I am sorry to say that you have bid sleeping with two eyes closed, good night”, the National President of the association, Chief Okey Wali, SAN, stated
yesterday the Nigeria Bar Association urged President Goodluck Jonathan to make use of the option of dialogue with the Boko Haram Islamic sect, with a view to securing the release of over 200 schoolgirls kidnapped in Chibok, Borno State
The association held their committee meeting yesterday in Abuja “There is something called burden of leadership, and it is by choice. Once you have chosen to seek to serve at any level, and more particularly, at the level of the presidency of a great country like Nigeria, with its good, bad and ugly, I am sorry to say that you have bid sleeping with two eyes closed, good night”, the National President of the association, Chief Okey Wali, SAN, stated
“History
has taught us that constructive engagement of such insurgents has sometimes
yielded dividends. All the years of terrorism in the United Kingdom and
Northern Ireland were brought to an end by the 1998 Goodfriday Agreement,
brokered by the then Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Mr Tony Blair. Many
of us in the Niger Delta will tell you that we did not believe that the amnesty
programme of the Federal Government would bring any peace in the region, but it
did.
“If as a
nation we had paid this much attention to the activities of Boko Haram and
terrorism generally, we definitely would not be where we are today, but like
they say, it’s better late than never. This is no time for buck-passing or
attribution of faults or blames.
“This is
a moment of solidarity, patriotism and support for the efforts to deal with a national
problem, no politics or religiosity. Terrorism, as Nyanya bomb blast has shown,
does not know religion, tribes or political party membership.
“We also
do not think that this is a time of setting up of panels of enquiry; let us
bring back the girls first, and then we can start with our usual rituals of
panels to find out the circumstances of these abductions. In the midst of
International collaboration, to find the girls and bring them back home, such
enquiries may very well be a distraction.
“No wonder
some of those on the panel from Borno State had boycotted the inauguration of
the Committee. Some of the military personnel involved in the search for the
girls, may very well be those to appear before such panels.
“We
believe that the military has its methodology of dealing with such issues via
the court marshal system if proven. We also believe that Service Chiefs and the
Military High Command still have our confidence, unless of course, if they have
lost the President’s confidence, then, we trust that he surely knows what to
do.
“The NBA
calls on the Federal Government to pay more attention to our borders with a
view to securing them.
“The NBA
calls on the government to review its strategy on terror. This current strategy
is not working in spite of Trillions of Naira being expended on security. In
March, 2014, the National Security Adviser rolled out the soft approach to
counter terrorism, which comprehensively weaves multi-stakeholder engagement
strategies. The Bar hopes that this strategy works.”
“But the
fight against terrorism is not only for the government and foreign countries
that offered to assist us; it is for all of us. The good news is that the
new-counter terror regime assigns role to every citizen and institution to play
in the fight against terrorism, in the sense that it advocates individual
responsibility, collective vigilance, creates opportunities for inter faith and
cross cultural conversation, establishes non-violent conflict resolution
mechanism.
“From the
foregoing, the NBA calls on all sectors of economy, social organizations,
including the private sector to be involved in the efforts to confront violent
extremism in the country”, it added.
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