SOME prominent northerners including the former Chief Justice of
Nigeria, CJN, Mohammed Uwais and Secretary to the Government of the
Federation, SGF, Ambassador Babagana Kingibe and former Nigerian
Ambassador to the United Nations, Ibrahim Gambari have asked the
President -elect, General Muhammadu Buhari, rtd, declare amnesty for
Boko Haram Insurgents when he takes over power on May 29.
However,
Second Republic lawmaker, Dr. Junaid Mohammed, dismissed the call
saying it would amount to rewarding criminals instead of punishing them
for crimes against humanity.
They also asked Buhari to give
priority attention to the special economic programmes for the North East
geopolitical zone which had been ravaged by the Boko Haram terrorists,
just as they warned against the scrapping of the on-going amnesty
programme for ex-militants in the Niger Delta region.
These were
contained in a communiqué issued after a two-day conference with the
theme: “Security and Governance Challenges in Africa’s largest Democracy
by the Savannah Centre for Diplomacy, Democracy and Development, SCDDD,
as part of its “Nigeria Beyond 12015 Project,” in Abuja yesterday.
Those
communiqué was signed by Prof. Ibrahim Gambari, founder of Savannah
Centre, Major General Ishola Williams, Executive Secretary, Pan-African
Strategic and Peace Research Group, PAN-AFSTRAG, Justice Mohammed Uwais
(chairman of the occasion) and Ambassador Abdullahi Omaki, executive
director of the Savannah Centre.
They also called on the Federal
Government ‘’to expedite action on the compensation of victims of Boko
Haram terrorism and insurgency through the established and funded
Victims’ Support Fund,’’ and for urgent priority attention to the
special economic programme for the North East by the incoming
administration, just as they condemned ‘’the carnage, devastations and
displacements, which the Boko Haram group inflicted upon many innocent
Nigerians in the north east region.’’
Furthermore, the communiqué
called ‘’for the establishment of a special economic programme for the
affected states of the North-East, focusing on rehabilitation,
resettlement and reconstruction,’’ as well as on the need for ‘’the
governors of the North-East States and indeed of the entire North, on
the necessity for a blueprint that addresses the issues of vocational
and skills-acquisition education for the youths.’’
Among those
who participated in the conference were the National Security Adviser,
NSA, Col Sambo Dasuki, rtd, (represented by Ambassador C.L. Olaseinde);
the Secretary, Borno State Elders’ Forum, BSEF, Dr Bulama Gubio (who
represented Governor Kashim Shettima); Dr. Zakariya Ousmane Ramadene of
N’djamena, Chad. Prof. Abubakar Momoh, DG, Electoral Institute, INEC,
Abuja and Professor Habu Galadima, director research, NIPSS, Jos,
Plateau State.
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