RATHER than just cracking down on Boko Haram, the Federal Government should adopt a dual approach to conclusively check the activities of the group, according to former President Olusegun Obasanjo.
Obasanjo said more could be done to reach out to the group to find out why its members are carrying out acts of violence.
But while some security chiefs warned Tuesday that the security challenges were pushing the nation to the precipice, others assured that they would be overcome.
Obasanjo who spoke Tuesday in an interview with the Cable News Network (CNN) noted: “To deal with a group like that, you need a carrot and stick. The carrot is finding out how to reach out to them.
“When you try to reach out to them and they are not amenable to being reached out to, you have to use the stick.”
Obasanjo said President Goodluck Jonathan was “just using the stick in his efforts. He’s doing one aspect of it well, but the other aspect must not be forgotten.”
Boko Haram that claims to have carried out numerous deadly attacks on mosques, churches and businesses in the northern parts of the country is suspected of having links to al Qaeda.
Obasanjo said he had tried to reach out to Boko Haram about a year and a half ago through a lawyer who was acting as the group’s proxy, and had asked if they had external backing.
The lawyer told him that the group was receiving support from other Nigerians who have resources overseas or “other organisations from abroad.”
“If they had 25 per cent support a year and a half ago, today that support has doubled,” the former president said.
Analysts suggest that reaching out to Boko Haram may be increasingly difficult because the group has split into different factions – some with a domestic focus and others with a more pan-jihadi approach.
According to Obasanjo, resolving the issue is key to Nigeria’s progress.
“Boko Haram undermines security, and anything that undermines security undermines development, undermines education, undermines health, undermines agriculture and food and nutrition security,” he said.
International rights group, Human Rights Watch, says Boko Haram has killed more than 2,800 people.
Also, in a report published late last year, Amnesty International condemned the increasingly brutal attacks carried out by Boko Haram since 2009, but said Nigeria’s security forces “have perpetrated serious human rights violations” in response.
But a military spokesman rejected the allegations.
Sarah’s daughter’s body was recovered by the police at Gambole Road with her throat sliced just like that of her slain mother.
An eyewitness, Ishaku Isa, said: “After the mother (Sarah) was killed on Monday night, the gunmen tied her daughter hands and whisked her away to an unknown destination. As we were expecting the police to identify where the kidnapped girl was taken to, a neighbour called me this morning that she was also killed and her body found on Gambole Road in Maiduguri.”
On how Budum was kidnapped, an eyewitness Yusufu Auta told The Guardian yesterday: “We were about paying for the purchases made on Sunday and Monday, when three armed men rushed into Alhaji’s office and pointed a gun on his head to surrender by tying his hands to the back and bundled him into an unmarked vehicle and sped off towards Baga Road.
“At about midnight, a call came in from the kidnappers demanding some money as ransom on Ali who is in their custody. They also warned that failure to pay the ransom, would result in Ali’s death.”
The Borno State Police Command spokesman, Gideon Jibrin yesterday confirmed the death of the girl but denied any report on the abducted businessman.
He added that no arrests were made yet but that the police were investigating the matter.
Besides, it was a moment of home truth yesterday in Abuja as security experts took a critical look at the security challenges in the country and came to the conclusion that urgent steps need to be taken to rescue the country from the precipice.
Speaking in his capacity as chairman of the national security summit with the theme “Addressing Nigeria’s Security Challenges for Sustainable Peace and Development” organised jointly by the Nigeria Police and Vanguard Newspapers, former Inspector General of Police, Gambo Jimeta, noted that successive governments in the country failed to get the nation’s priority right hence the current spate of security challenges.
“It is neglect that has taken us to where we are today. What we have in Nigeria today in terms of security is self-inflicted. In the colonial days priorities were got right. If you see any country that is in trouble, it is neglect of security. Things are not all right,” he said.
Jimeta who was Inspector General of Police under former Military President, Gen. Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida, urged the Federal Government to take urgent steps to address the situation, stressing: “I don’t know how many minutes it will take our enemy to overrun the country if we continue this way.”
Jimeta, a former Minister of Agriculture and National Security Adviser also expressed concern over provocative utterances of some leaders in the country, adding that government needed to look at the plight of Nigerians.
“Some leaders open their mouths and talk irresponsibly. There is the need for caution and sympathy for the less privileged. The strangulation of people by some organs of government should be considered. Let us put our priorities right and build a robust internal security system. Things are not all right,” he said.
He advised that the judicial process in the country should not be truncated while religion should not be used as a cover to commit crime.
The Minister of Interior, Abba Moro, observed that the summit was a demonstration that most Nigerians were concerned about insecurity in the country. He advised that the gathering should not be just another talk show with nothing to show for it. Consequently, he called on the organisers to come up with pragmatic measures that would address insecurity in the country.
“This is not an avenue for lamentation on the unfortunate neglect of what ought to have been but should be aimed at a pragmatic mechanism for tackling the problem. Let it not be sound and fury,” he appealed.
In his address, President Goodluck Jonathan, represented by the Minister of Police Affairs, Caleb Olubolade said time had come for the country to seriously fight insecurity.
“The time has come for us as a nation to seriously rise up and address the security challenges confronting the nation. In this respect, the government, security agencies, stakeholders and other citizens have to work together,” he said.
He expressed optimism that the fight against terrorism would yield results. “I am optimistic that the political will being demonstrated by this administration will yield the desired result in the fight against terrorism, improved crime investigation and enhanced public order policing which will guarantee the ultimate protection of lives and property and law enforcement in our society,” he said.
In his welcome address, the Inspector General of Police (IG) Mohammed Abubakar, noted that as the country grew, the nature of threats would increase but expressed the determination of the police to contain the situation.
“As the country grows in terms of development, so is the nature and sophistication of threats being faced. It is indisputable that security plays unquantifiable role in the growth and development of any human society. It is fundamental to the very existence of the society. Insecurity, therefore, is a venomous threat to the wellbeing of the citizens of any nation and a cankerworm that destroys the root that holds the existence of any nation.
“The security situation in Nigeria, in recent times, has been a source of great concern to all patriotic citizens and to the international friends of Nigeria,” the IG said.
He stressed that the idea of the summit arose from the fact that security is the responsibility of all and assured that the outcome would provide the roadmap for solution to the problem.
Besides, a group, the Jonathan Project, has revealed that intelligence agencies have been gathering critical information on the activities of Boko Haram and will soon knock out key players and drivers of the insurgency.
The group which is one of those that fervently backed President Jonathan in 2011, said the Federal Government was making concerted effort to overhaul the country’s security apparatus to enable it to meet the challenges of terrorism posed by groups like Boko Haram.
The Coordinator of Jonathan Project, George Kerley, said the full military might of the Federal Republic of Nigeria would be deployed in the fight against Boko Haram.
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