Friday 13 January 2012

Ex-militant Leader, Dokubo Backs Jonathan

  The stakes in the on going Boko Haram attacks have gone up a notch after a former Niger/Delta militant warned that the group’s actions could provoke reprisal conduct from the south but were yet to do so only out of respect for President Goodluck Jonathan, who hails from the region.

Mujahid Dokubo-Asari, a Muslim who led a rebellion in the delta until a peace deal with the government in 2004, said bomb attacks by Boko Haram could provoke retaliation by mostly Christian southerners, including those living in the delta, reports Reuters.

The President has already declared a state of emergency in four states in the north which Boko Haram targeted in Christmas Day bomb attacks, including one against a church near Abuja that killed 37 people.
The attacks, and their spread from the north into other parts of the country, have raised the prospect of sectarian and regional violence escalating in a country about evenly divided between mainly southern Christians and mainly northern Muslims.

Asked if northerners could be targeted by some from the majority Christian south, Dokubo-Asari replied: "It is seconds away ... Nigeria is on the precipice of a civil war."
"For Niger Delta people to take up arms is just a minute away. It's just Goodluck that is holding us back," said Asari, who is from Jonathan's southern, mainly Christian Ijaw tribe, but who converted to Islam.
"We have all reached the extreme. There is nothing anybody can do about it except we fight."

Asari's former group, the Niger Delta People's Volunteer Force, managed to push oil prices to record highs in 2004 with its constant attacks and threats against oil production in the delta's swampy creeks.
Since then, peace deals with the region's warlords have pacified the delta, and Boko Haram in the north has become the number one threat to Nigeria's security.

Full-bearded, shaven-headed, and wearing an ash-colored Islamic robe, Asari paused to read some Facebook posts from his iPad about the Christmas Day bombs.
Asari said he was sceptical that the government could negotiate with moderate members of Boko Haram via "back channels" as National Security Adviser General Owoye Andrew Azazi suggested in an interview with Reuters.

Sitting in his flat in Port Harcourt, Asari said the group's faceless nature, an issue General Azazi acknowledged, made talks impossible.

"If you cannot identify the people who are carrying out these attacks, how can you dialogue with them, interact with them, and bring them round the table?" he said.
In any case, such extreme violence meant the time for talks had passed, he said.
"You cannot ask government to negotiate now. On what basis? The government should...rein these people in, or the people will resort to self-help," said Asari, who stressed where his loyalties lay despite being a Muslim.

"Anybody that wants to start any revolution in Goodluck's time, we the Ijaw will pull down that revolution," he said.


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1 comment:

  1. Has Asari entered the frame? This gonna different.

    ReplyDelete

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