Wednesday 18 June 2014
Stop arresting northerners, AYCF warns S’East govs
The Arewa
Youth
Consultative
Forum on
Tuesday
condemned
what it
referred to
as a random arrest of 486 northerners in Abia State as suspected
Boko Haram insurgents.
The group said it was certain that virtually all the arrested
northerners had no link with Boko Haram, warning the South-
East governors that such action was capable of fuelling enmity
between the northerners and southerners.
The President of AYCF, Alhaji Yerima Shettima, told The
PUNCH that the group was worried that a continuation of such
arrests could lead to the break-up of Nigeria.
He said, “This gives us a lot of worry. Are these South-East
governors or whoever is at the helms of affairs doing this in the
interest of this country or to cause more hatred for our people,
so that the country will break up?
Those who are acting out this script of disintegration are not
helping this country, especially at this challenging period.
“We are not in support of Boko Haram or their bomb attacks.
We are saying that innocent citizens should not suffer because
some evil-minded people come from their area. I can tell you
that those who were arrested in Abia are not Boko Haram
members.
“We had a case where about 500 people arrested in Lagos. I
intervened and on getting to the force headquarters, we
discovered that most of them were innocent and they were
released.
“We are not saying security agencies should not do their work,
but they should not go about arresting hundreds of people just
because they are looking for one or two suspects.”
Shettima also said it was wrong to assume that only northerners
were planting bombs in the country, adding that some
southerners had been arrested for terrorism.
He condemned the northern governors and other political
leaders in the region for keeping quiet while northerners were
being victimised.
The Boko Haram suspects, including eight women, were said to
have been arrested along the Enugu-Port Harcourt Expressway
by soldiers attached to the 144 Battalion of the Nigerian Army,
Asa in the Ukwa West Local Government Area on Sunday.
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