Mallam Shehu Sani and Dr. Junaid Muhammed
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The
 Arewa Consultative Forum and two prominent Northern leaders on Monday 
disagreed on the composition of the committee on amnesty for the 
extremist Islamic sect,  Boko Haram.
The PUNCH learnt  of this just as
 the House of Representatives said it supported the move by the Federal 
Government to grant amnesty to  the sect members.
For now, the National Security 
Adviser,Col. Sambo Dasuki (retd.);  the Chief of Defence Staff,  Admiral
 Ola Ibrahim; and a representative of the State Security Service, are 
believed  to be among those on the list of the committee members.
While the two activists – Mallam Shehu 
Sani and Dr. Junaid Muhammed – are  of the view that nothing worthwhile 
would come out of the amnesty,  the ACF thinks otherwise.
Sani, who is the Executive Director of 
the Civil Rights Congress, told one of our correspondents that the 
process so far adopted by the Federal Government in announcing the plan 
to constitute the committee was faulty.
He said, “Before the amnesty, there must
 be first and foremost, a committee accepted  by  the government and 
also recognised by the sect.
“Now, setting up a committee that is 
constituted by friends of the government and security agents will not be
 accepted by the insurgents. All committees that had been set up in the 
past were dismissed by the insurgents.
“And again, if you have a committee to 
serve as a mediator, it   should extract a commitment to a ceasefire for
 at least six months and within this period, issues about victims of 
Boko Haram could now be addressed.”
Sani dismissed those who attended a  
meeting that informed the  plan to  set up the amnesty committee at the 
Presidential  Villa last week as  “government apologists” who knew 
little about Boko Haram  and its mode of operations.
He went on to warn that, “If we are not 
careful, we will fall into a trap where hundreds and billions of naira 
will be paid to people who are not part of the insurgency.  As far as I 
am concerned, this amnesty is not going to work and it is very likely 
that the group will dismiss the amnesty.
“We  have to ask ourselves ‘will the Boko Haram group accept the amnesty?’
“ I doubt it very much in the sense that
 amnesty pronouncement by the Federal Government is like  putting the 
cart before the horse.”
Muhammed, who is the Convener of the  
Concerned  Northern Politicians, Academics, Professionals and 
Businessmen,  said it was laughable that known government apologists 
were the same people being consulted.
According to him, there is  nothing new that “these men have to offer.”
He asked, “Who are these so-called 
northern elders that went  to the Villa? Which north do they represent? 
Is it the same Ango Abdullahi, who  was  a vice-chancellor   that is now
 a northern elder or is it Paul Unongo?
“These are government apologists. How   
can  they  now be interlocutors between the government and Boko Haram? 
This  is something I find puzzling.
“If you collect something from somebody 
and then you go back to the same person to want to mediate what do you 
get? This whole thing is a complete circus.  Now that the government has
 decided to play its own game, let us see what they can achieve.
“Now that they have decided to negotiate
 with  ghosts and grant amnesty to ghosts,   let us see those who will 
deliver the ghosts to them.
“You do not give amnesty for nothing; is
 it amnesty to Boko Haram or amnesty to the people of the North who the 
government considers as adversaries?
But the ACF expressed the view that the committee  should be allowed to perform its duties.
“The setting up of the committee to look
 at the viability of granting amnesty is the  beginning  of a process. 
We should give it a chance to succeed “the forum said through its   
Publicity Secretary, Mr. Anthony Sani.
The ACF  specifically took on Sani by 
challenging him to come up with a better alternative method of making 
Boko Haram members lay down  their arms and embrace.
 The group  said, “It was not ACF that 
went to the Villa but some northern elders who did under Alhaji Maitama 
Sule. The ACF has also  supported the option of amnesty that can lead to
 dialogue.
“But we do not want to believe in the 
submission that nothing will come out of the amnesty, precisely because 
it is an offer to enable the “ghost” or “faceless” group to come  to the
 negotiating table, since the use of force has not yielded any result.
“If  Sani has a better alternative to 
both the use  of force and  amnesty, then he should let the government 
know it for  public good.”
 Efforts to get the spokesman for  
Abdullahi proved abortive.  Telephone calls put to his personal 
assistant  rang out without any response.
 Meanwhile, the  House of 
Representatives  has said that granting amnesty to Boko Haram  is part 
of the  responsibilities of the government to protect the lives and 
property of the citizenry.
 But, the Senate gave conditions for 
granting the group amnesty, insisting that the victims of  its  attacks 
should also be compensated by the government for the proposal to 
succeed.
 The Deputy Majority Leader of the House, Mr. Leo Ogor, who spoke on the matter, told The PUNCH
 in Abuja on Monday, that President Goodluck Jonathan did not need the 
approval of lawmakers   to grant members of the sect amnesty.
 He added that so long as the amnesty would guarantee a lasting peace in the country, the House would support the President.
 The House deputy leader spoke further, 
“This is not a bad issue (amnesty). If the President can achieve peace 
through amnesty to Boko Haram, I don’t see why the House will not 
support it.
 “However, it is an administrative 
matter that does not require our approval. Our approval comes when there
 are financial implications; which will require appropriation.”
Shortly before its members proceeded on 
the Easter break,  the House had   passed a resolution urging government
 to consider the option of discussing with the sect’s members.
 On its  part, the Senate, through its  
 Leader, Victor Ndoma-Egba (SAN), said the proposal was welcome if the 
negotiations took into account the victims of Boko Haram’s activities.
The Senate Leader argued that it was 
necessary to draw experiences from other countries in bringing to an end
 the terror activities in the country.
He noted that in addition to military 
strategies, a “back door approach” such as amnesty should be considered 
in bringing an end to the violence, but with conditions.
 “In doing this, the terms of the 
amnesty must be carefully negotiated. The victims of the terror must be 
in the picture of whatever is being put together,” he said.
According to him, such victims should get some reprieve in form of compensations while the insurgents enjoyed amnesty.
He further argued that in reaching any 
meaningful conclusions on amnesty for Boko Haram, “there must be a 
guarantee that the amnesty will bring the violence to an end.
“This means that those who would be 
negotiating on their behalf must have the full mandate of the group; not
 that after it is granted somebody will say that they are not party to 
the agreement.”
The Senate had held several meetings 
with security agencies to find a- way out of the heightened terror 
attacks on innocent citizens, especially in parts of the North.
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