Sunday, 18 May 2014
Boko Haram Prepares To Begin Release Of Abducted Schoolgirls Next Week – Reports
Boko Haram abandons demands for its top commanders to be released in negotiations with the Nigerian government that could see “gradual” release of schoolgirls as early as next week, Telegraph has learnt.
According to the UK newspaper, the Islamist extremist group has dropped demands for the release of their comrades held by the government and is ready to start releasing the schoolgirls abducted by the sect on April 14, 2014 in the coming weeks. In a significant concession, the group has abandoned demands for its top commanders to be released, seemingly aware that this would be politically impossible for the Nigerian government, the source said.
TELEGRAPH REPORTS:
The Telegraph first reported details of
Boko Haram’s offer of an
imminent prisoner exchange last
Tuesday , when sources close to to some
of the militants’ families said that a senior
Islamic cleric from northern Nigeria
would be appointed to mediate on its
behalf with the government.
The cleric has since been joined by a
former aide to one of the group’s
founders. Neither man has been
named, possibly for their own
safety. While the Nigerian
government has insisted that it is not
willing to enter prisoner swap
negotiations, the source claimed that
dialogue had already been going in
secret for several days.
“Contrary to the public rejection of
any swap deal by the Nigerian
government, there are some on-the-
ground talks taking place,” the source
said. “An agreement was reached
about two or three days ago in
principle to start releasing some
prisoners.”
He said that among the prisoners that
the group wanted released would be
wives and families of Boko Haram
fighters, some of whom have been
taken into custody by the Nigerian
government in order to exert
emotional pressure on the fighters
themselves. “The group also has a list
of lower-level fighters that it wants
released as well, but they are not
high-profile ones,” the source added.
He said that in exchange, Boko
Haram was willing to start a
“gradual” release of around 100 of
the girls – possibly beginning as early
as the coming the week. “Depending
on how the other side responds, the
girls will be released in small groups.
They will be left at a certain safe
location, and the authorities will then
be told as to where they can pick them
up from.”
Details of the offer emerged as
officials investigated reports that
Boko Haram was responsible for the
kidnapping of up to 10 Chinese
workers in neighbouring Cameroon,
where the group now also has a
presence.
On Saturday, Nigeria and its
neighbours, including Cameroon,
Benin, Chad, and Niger, declared
“war” on Boko Haram after an
international summit in Paris hosted
by the French president, François
Hollande.
The offensive will involve co-
ordination of surveillance efforts
aimed at finding the girls, the sharing
of intelligence, the tightening of
border controls, and a regional
counter-terrorism strategy with
Western help.
The Telegraph source said Boko
Haram leaders had been upset by the
declaration of “war” at the Paris
summit, and that this could encourage
it to withdraw its offer.
At the summit, the countries agreed to
forge a regional counter-terrorism
strategy with expertise and training
support from Britain, France, the
European Union and the United
States.
The countries also agreed to push for
UN sanctions against the leaders of
Boko Haram and another Nigerian
Islamist group, Ansaru. America has
already designated the leaders of
both group as terrorists.
Britain will host a follow-up meeting
to discuss the Boko Haram crisis next
month. It is thought that the
kidnapped schoolgirls are being held
somewhere in either north-east
Nigeria or across the border in
Cameroon.
Boko Haram’s leader, Abubakar
Shekau, demanded the release of his
“brethren” in a video last week in
which the kidnapped schoolgirls were
paraded.
The Chinese embassy in Cameroon
confirmed that ten of its workers had
gone missing on Friday at a site near
the town on Waza, 12 miles from the
Nigerian border and close to the
Sambisa forest, a Boko Haram
stronghold.
Lu Qingjiang, the embassy’s political
counsellor, said that one Chinese
worker was also injured in the attack,
China’s Xinhua state news agency
reported.
Ten vehicles belonging to China’s
state-run construction company
Sinohydro, which is repairing roads
in Cameroon, were also taken,
Xinhua said.
Mr Lu called on the Cameroonian
authorities to “not put the lives of
Chinese nationals missing in danger in
case actions of liberation be
launched”, Xinhua said.
Friday’s incident began when power
was cut in the evening. A five-hour
gunfight followed, a guard at the
Waza National Park told Reuters.
“Some of us decided to hide in the
forest with the animals,” said the
guard.
Cameroon state radio said that a
Cameroon special forces soldier was
killed. Four others, including two
soldiers were seriously wounded. As
well as at least 10 vehicles, the rebels
took a container of explosives
belonging to the Chinese company, it
said.
Boko Haram has staged several
attacks in northern Cameroon during
its five-year fight to set up an
Islamist state. Last month, it attacked
a police post killing two people. The
rebels kidnapped a French family in
February 2013.
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