
A blogger suspected to have ties with Boko Haram, Ahmad Salkida, has said that former President Goodluck Jonathan almost secured the release of the over 200 schoolgirls kidnapped by Boko Haram from Government Girls’ Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State on April 14, 2014.
Salkida, who is currently on self-exile in Dubai over fears for his safety, said in an
article posted on his blog that Jonathan negotiated a swap deal which would have seen to the release of the girls in exchange for some Boko Haram militants in Nigerian prisons.
Salkida said it was therefore curious that President Muhammadu Buhari could say in his maiden presidential media chat last Wednesday that he had no information on the girls.
I the article titled: Chibok Girls: What is the president hiding? the blogger alleged that military commanders on the field had given him a different perspective on the girls, which was apparently not known to Buhari.
He said he was assured that the girls were still alive and that some of the girls had refused to be converted from Christianity to Islam by Boko Haram.
The article below:
Chibok Girls: what is the president hiding?
If the president wants to have
video evidence of all Boko Haram captives he can receive it today,
that’s if he hasn’t already. If the president wants the captors of
innocent Nigerian citizens and school girls to put them on the phone
with their parents, he can have it done, except if he doesn’t want
to. He has the might as the president, so why is he saying he has no
clue about the state of the girls?
Islamic State’s West Africa
Province (ISWAP), popularly called Boko Haram, didn’t fall from the sky;
they are mostly Nigerians. The abductions were done in Nigeria and the
girls are still widely reported to be in Nigeria. Is the president
saying no one in Nigeria has access to the sect, a country of over 170
million or, if those with access have not come forward, what has he done
as the president to find them?
What does the president mean
when he says no credible leader of ISWAP has come forward with evidence
of the 219 girls abducted in their dormitories in April 2014 before he
will consider negotiation? Does the president want a Boko Haram leader
to approach the fortified gates of Aso Rock and announce himself and
wait to be ushered in? And who are these Boko Haram leaders that were
attempting to approach the federal government over the last months that
were not credible enough?
All over the globe, there are
people with access to those who operate outside established norms, and
such people are used to reach out as third parties to mediate between
two opposing sides. What any serious government like the one run by
President Buhari (as we are made to believe) should do is to use
his intelligence agencies to vet those sources. However, the question we
should all be asking is: what happened to the video evidence former
President Jonathan received less than two months into the abduction of
the girls that almost saw the release of the abducted girls in a swap
deal – or is everything Jonathan too dirty for this government to try
its hands on?
My understanding of the Buhari
administration as it relates to the negotiations of the abducted school
girls is that they are living in a bubble. They want everything to work
for them like ABCD: no hitches, no obstacles. It should be like sending a
child to a shop to buy sweets. If the child loses the money on his way
or buys something contrary, he is spanked and accused of carelessness or
stealing the money. Negotiations of this nature are usually tough,
rough and irritating, but that doesn’t mean we should abandon it each
time it occurs. Even failed military raids are repeatedly again and
again until they succeed.
Even the Western countries that
bask under the statements that they do not negotiate with terrorists
have done so several times, like the exchange of Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl that
led to the release of five Taliban leaders held at Guantanamo Bay. Also
noteworthy is the case of four children between the ages of 5 and 12
among seven members of a French family kidnapped in Cameroon and were
later swapped with Boko Haram militants in April 2013. The examples are
many, so are the options before President Buhari on Chibok girls and
dozens of other captives that now despair at the likelihood that they
will be free from captivity.
Most of the Chibok girls,
whether they are split into groups or not, are alive, multiple credible
sources have told me, and if a deal to release them will weaken national
security and endanger the entire country, then the federal
government shouldn’t make a deal. But was there a deal that can
undermine national security that has been pursued vigorously to its
conclusion? To make the terror group give more and more concessions, the
perspectives of many top security officials in Nigeria run in opposite
directions with the statements of President Buhari during his media
chat yesterday.
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