Nigerian cardinal backs amnesty for Boko Haram fighters willing to renounce terror
Wednesday, September 23, 2015
Up to 80 percent of Boko Haram fighters do not subscribe to the terror group's Islamist ideology and are therefore likely to respond to the chance to leave the terror group without facing serious consequences.
By John
Pontifex
NEW
YORK—A leading Nigerian prelate said that offering amnesty to
Boko Haram fighters would prompt most of the militants to lay down their arms.
Such a policy could bring about a peaceful resolution of the ongoing Islamists
insurgency, said Cardinal John Onaiyekan, the archbishop of Abuja, the Nigerian
capital.
On
a visit to New York, the cardinal told international Catholic charity Aid to
the Church in Need that up to 80 percent of Boko Haram fighters do not
subscribe to the terror group’s Islamist ideology and are therefore likely to
respond to the chance to leave the terror group without facing serious
consequences.
The prelate said that “most fighters in the ranks of Boko Haram are there
because they were drafted and had no choice” and that “those who espouse the
theology of Boko Haram are few.” He added that “up to 70 percent or 80 percent
will want to come out.”
The
cardinal’s call for the consideration of granting amnesty to Boko Haram
fighters comes amid reports of breakthroughs in the struggle against the terror
group. Nigeria’s military just announced significant gains in its
counter-offensive against Boko Haram in its traditional heartland in Nigeria’s
northeast. However, Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekaku dismissed the claims as
“lies.”
Cardinal
Onaiyekan confirmed that “in the past month we have seen evidence of major
inroads into parts of the country held by Boko Haram. They no longer control
large sections of our national territory. They no longer hold areas that are
out of bounds to everybody but them--but they are still around and can create
havoc.”
The
archbishop praised the policies of new Nigerian President Mohammadu Buhari in
tackling Boko Haram since he took office May 29, 2015, including an initiative to form an international coalition to take on Boko Haram, an alliance with
neighbouring Chad, Cameroon and Niger. The prelate also stressed the importance
of the involvement of major world powers like the US and France, whose ability
to provide intelligence to the Nigerian army is crucial.
With
Boko Haram apparently in retreat, the Cardinal said that a policy of offering
amnesty to Boko Haram fighters would have to include a provision that would
ensure that these militants give up their weapons and renounce violence along with
any allegiance to Boko Haram.
The cardinal said that the government would have to promise those leaving Boko
Haram decent treatment. Such a promise, he said, “will encourage many to come
out.” By contrast, he added, if the military, upon their surrender, “treats
them badly or slaughters them, that will stop others from coming out.”
Proclaiming
that Nigeria is “big enough and strong enough to take the risk of amnesty,” the
cardinal acknowledged that the proposed policy is not popular among Christians.
He explained: “Boko Haram succeeded in destroying all goodwill between Muslims
and Christians in those areas where [the terror group] was active. We have seen
a lot of anger between Muslims and Christians. Much will need to be done” to
bring the two sides back together.
According
to the Catholic Diocese of Maiduguri, which lies in the heart of Boko Haram’s
prime target area in Nigeria’s northeast, at least 5,000 people have been
killed, while 350 churches and rectories were destroyed. Up to 100,000
Catholics have been displaced and are only slowly beginning to return to their
homes.
Destruction in the Diocese of Maiduguri; ACN photo
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