Tuesday 2 April 2013

Jonathan To Buhari: Stop Boko Haram

President Goodluck Jonathan, Tuesday, sent a strong message to former
Head of State, General Muhammadu Buhari, pleading with him to
spearhead the campaign to persuade members of the Boko Haram sect to
accept dialogue, as a means of ending the orgy of violence in the
North.
Similarly, Jonathan asked Buhari to emulate the role he (Jonathan)
played by going to meet militants in their vast hideouts in the Niger
Delta to plead with them to lay down their arms and accept the general
amnesty granted by the late President Umaru Musa Yar'Adua on June 25,
2009.
Jonathan said he expected Buhari to lead the way in persuading the
Boko Haram insurgents in the North to stop bombings and enter into
dialogue with the Federal Government with a view to ending the
violence in the region, which is threatening to disrupt the economy of
the region and Nigeria.
The President, who sent the message to Buhari through his Senior
Special Assistant on Public Affairs, Dr. Doyin Okupe, accused the
former head of state of making false allegations against him during
his interview in London last week.

What Buhari told BBC in London

During the interview with the BBC, Buhari had said that the Federal
Government should be held responsible for the worsening state of
insecurity in Nigeria, accusing the leadership of not taking steps to
halt the slide, which has claimed many lives and property in the
region.
Buhari said: "The problem of terrorism is not confined to the North
alone. Insecurity generally should be blamed on the Federal
Government.
"The world is very much concerned about two things — the issue of
security and economic wellbeing of a nation. Security is number one. A
nation can only be economically viable if there is security. But how
did all these crises start? How did the crises begin and assume this
dimension?
"Until now, everyday, they abduct people and receive ransoms. How was
the problem reduced? How did it start? What method was employed to
convince them to mellow down?
"Similarly, what we should look at is, how did the Boko Haram start?
We know all these. Security is the responsibility of the government.
"It is the responsibility of the Federal Government to know how this
thing started and how to go about it."
Jonathan takes on Buhari
But Okupe asked Nigerians to demand from Buhari what he had done as a
leader in the North and a former head of state to halt the attacks by
the sect.
He said: "Nigerians should ask him (Buhari) that as a former Head of
state and as someone who wants to be president again, what he has
done to end this insurgence in the country.
"Or is it when he becomes President, he will stop the insurgence? No,
it does not work that way. He should emulate President Jonathan who
went to the creeks of the Niger Delta canvassing peace and dialogue
with the militants of the Niger Delta.
"Everybody knows that it was General Buhari,who vowed to make Nigeria
ungovernable for President Jonathan if he loses the last presidential
election. It was in Minna, that he said that once votes are counted
and he loses that people should go for blood. He said in Hausa
language. General Buhari is the person who sowed the wind that the
nation is now reaping in whirlwind.
"He is not in any position to apportion blames on the issue of
violence in the North or in Nigeria in general. He is a protagonist of
violence. The only position he sees for not being the President is to
call for violence. This government has tried as much as possible to
contain some of Buhari's unguarded statements. I don't think anybody
in Nigeria will take Buhari very serious when he makes such comments.
"If there is anybody to blame, General Buhari comes number one on that
list. Have you ever seen General Buhari visit BornoState or condemn
the acts of the Boko Haram or condole whether Christians or Muslims
that have been killed?
"A man who can traverse the whole length and breadth of Nigeria, yet
he cannot use that clout that he has and get leaders together to put
an end to the insurgence in the country. And yet he finds it
comfortable to blame other people. What has he done as a former Head
of State to help Nigeria and Nigerians stop the militancy in the North
or in other parts of the country?"

Source: Vanguard

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