Turai, wife of former
President Umaru Yar’Adua, has urged President Goodluck Jonathan to
forgive the Boko Haram sect as her late husband did to former militants
in the Niger Delta.
The former first lady
advised Jonathan
not to listen to anyone who advises him not to grant
the sect amnesty.
She said this in Lagos
on Friday night during the Award Gala Night organised by the Niger Delta
Young Professionals.
Turai said, “When
Yar’Adua saw that the people in the Niger Delta, particularly the
children were dying callously, he (Yar’Adua) took it upon himself to
grant amnesty to the militants to ensure lasting peace.
“There is poverty in
the North. What Yar’Adua did in the Niger Delta, let Jonathan do the
same thing to the North.
“Mr. President should
not allow his advisers to deceive him. Let him sit down and think about
the insecurity in the North.”
She said she respected
her late husband and would continue to do so till her death.
She also advocated
youths’ empowerment, saying if the youth are empowered, the country
would be empowered.
Meanwhile, President
Goodluck Jonathan has blamed northern leaders for the continued Boko
Haram violence.
The President, who was
represented at the event by the Minister of Special Duties and
Inter-Governmental Affairs, Kabiru Turaki, said northern leaders had not
done enough to unmask those behind the group’s activities.
He said, “When the
issue of Niger Delta was raging, and I will say this with all sense of
responsibility, leaders of the region, particularly the governors, were
the drivers of the process.
“They reached out to
the people and to the militants, they spoke and took their discussion,
to an appreciable level before the Federal Government stepped in and
then harnessed everything.
“What efforts are the
northern leaders making? We need to learn because every incident of Boko
Haram in Nigeria is situated within the geopolitical confines of a
region. What are the leaders doing?
“Security agencies are
not magicians – they are not spirits. These people who perpetrate these
crimes do not come from the moon; they live within them. Why are they
not helping the security agencies with the needed information? The
problem of insecurity is not only the problem of government – it is the
problem of all of us.”
He said the Federal
Government was making efforts towards solving the problems.
“What we solicit from
Nigerians are understanding and patience,” he stated.
He said when the late
Yar’Adua and himself decided to take the initiative to address the
restiveness of Niger Delta militants, they knew the people they were
speaking to and knew where they could go and see them, either in their
creeks, headquarters or homes.
“We reached out to them
and spoke to them. We understood each other and on the basis of that,
an understanding was reached and it was this understanding that was
faithfully executed that led us to the amnesty in the region,” he said.
He said in the case of
Boko Haram, their perpetrators were unknown, except for a few of them
who spoke on the Internet or to the press.
At the awards five
persons were recognised including late Yar’Adua (posthumous); Akwa Ibom
Governor Godswill Akpabio; his Lagos State counterpart, Babatunde
Fashola; Chairman, Arik Air, Mr. Joseph Arumemi-Ikhide and 10-year-old
author, Daniella Dan-Jumbo.
Punch Nigeria
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