BUHARI TO NIGER DELTA MILITANTS: Accept dialogue or face war
· Lists new conditions for talks with Boko Haram
· Confirms Shekau wounded
President Muhammadu Buhari has urged militants in the Niger Delta region to accept dialogue or face military action.
The President warned that his administration would not continue to
watch helplessly as a few aggrieved persons destroyed the country’s oil
infrastructure when the issues at stake could be resolved through
dialogue.
The President spoke in Nairobi, Kenya, with journalists on the
side-line of the sixth Tokyo International Conference on African
Development (TICAD VI).
He said the Federal Government was open to dialogue with the Niger
Delta militants to resolve all contending issues in the oil-rich area.
Buhari said: ‘‘We do not believe that they (militants) have announced a
ceasefire. We are trying to understand them more; who are their leaders
and which areas do they operate and other relevant issues?”
Also at bilateral talks with the Prime Minister of Japan during the
conference, Buhari declared that if the Niger Delta militants refused
to negotiate with his government, he would crush them the same way he
crushed Boko Haram.
He told the Japanese leader that with the defeat of the Boko Haram
terrorists by the military, the attention of the administration was now
focused on stopping the destruction of the country’s economic assets
by militants in the Niger Delta region.
“We are talking to some of their leaders. We will deal with them as we dealt with Boko Haram if they refuse to talk to us.
“As a government, we know our responsibility which is to secure the
environment. It is clear to us that lenders won’t fund projects in an
insecure environment.
“We realise that we have to secure the country before we can
efficiently manage it,” the President said, while he assured existing
and prospective foreign investors that their investments in Nigeria
will be protected.
He also noted that the Federal Government was ready to negotiate with
the leadership of the Boko Haram terrorists through any
internationally-recognised Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO) if they
are not ready to talk directly with the government.
On the overtures to Boko Haram insurgents, Buhari said that his new
position was how far the Federal Government would go to discuss the
release of the Chibok girls kidnapped by the sect since April 14, 2014.
The President added that his administration would only dialogue with
bona fide leaders of the terror group who know the whereabouts of the
girls.
Buhari declared that “the government which I preside over is prepared
to talk to bona fide leaders of Boko Haram,” because he was not
prepared to waste time and resources with doubtful sources claiming to
know the whereabouts of the girls.
“If they do not want to talk to us directly, let them pick an
internationally recognised Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO),
convince them that they are holding the girls and that they want
Nigeria to release a number of Boko Haram leaders in detention, which
they are supposed to know.
‘‘If they do it through the ‘modified leadership’ of Boko Haram and
they talk with an internationally recognised NGO, then Nigeria will be
prepared to discuss their release,” he said.
Stressing the need for talks with only credible leaders of Boko Haram,
the President said: “The person known in Nigeria as their leader, we
understand was edged out and the Nigerian members of Boko Haram started
surrendering themselves to the Nigerian military.
“We learnt that in an air strike by the Nigerian Air Force he was
wounded. Indeed, their top hierarchy and lower cadre have a problem and
we know this because when we came into power, they were holding 14 of
the 774 local government areas in Nigeria. But now they are not holding
any territory and they have split to smaller groups attacking soft
targets.”
He also announced that the Federal Government would sustain concrete
measures to diversify the economy by devoting more resources to
agriculture in the 2017 Budget.
“Besides, there is still more to do on education, health and other
infrastructure to ensure quick and voluntary return of displaced persons
to their native communities”, he added.
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