Google – AFP, 2 November 2012
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President
Goodluck Jonathan's spokesman said the government was willing
to listen to Boko
Haram's grievances (AFP/File, John MacDougall)
|
ABUJA —
Nigeria said Friday that it is willing to end the Boko Haram insurgency through
dialogue after a man claiming to represent the Islamists declared they were
open to peace talks.
Abu
Mohammed Ibn Abdulaziz, who spoke to journalists in the northeastern city of
Maiduguri on Thursday by teleconference, identified himself as a senior Boko
Haram leader but his credibility is in question.
He said the
group was not challenging the Nigerian state, directly contradicting previous
Boko Haram statements, and spoke in English, a departure for the group that has
consistently addressed the public in Hausa.
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A school
destroyed by Boko Haram
militants in Maidiguri, northeast Nigeria,
in May this
year (AFP/File, Pius
Utomi Ekpei)
|
There was
also no mention of Islamic law in his conditions for dialogue. Boko Haram's
demands have varied during its insurgency which has killed hundreds since 2009,
but a commitment to impose sharia in the mainly Muslim north has been a
constant.
Past public
statements from the Islamists have been issued through a spokesman who uses the
alias Abul Qaqa.
It was
therefore not clear if Abdulaziz was representing Abubakar Shekau, the presumed
insurgent leader who has been designated a global terrorist by the United
States.
"I
have seen the story in which the Boko Haram is reportedly declaring a ceasefire
and the opening of dialogue," said President Goodluck Jonathan's spokesman
Reuben Abati.
"If
what the proposed ceasefire is intended to achieve are the objectives of peace
and security, then it is a welcome development," he added in a message
sent to AFP.
"President
Jonathan had made it clear that if the people behind Boko Haram are ready to
come forward, and table their grievances, then government will be willing to
listen."
Abdulaziz
proposed peace talks in Saudi Arabia to be moderated by Nigeria's former military
leader Muhammadu Buhari, now a senior opposition figure who lost to Jonathan in
2011 polls.
"We
are not actually challenging the state as people are saying but the security
(forces) who are killing our members, children and wives," Abdulaziz said.
"We
want to dialogue but government must show sincerity in its handling of the
situation," he added.
Violence
linked to the Boko Haram insurgency is estimated to have left more than 2,800
people dead since 2009, including killings by security forces.
The Islamists
have attacked the security services, Christians in churches and government
officials among other targets.
Shekau has
on several previous occasions ruled out talks with government.


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