Fasehun’s OPC demand release of Leah, reject amnesty for B-Haram
Abducted Dapchi school girls with government officials after their release
(Nigeria) The
Oodua People’s Congress, OPC, has called for the immediate and unconditional
release of Leah Sharibu, the only girl left in Boko Haram captivity from the
110 students of the Government Girls’ Technical College, Dapchi, Yobe State,
recently abducted by the Islamic sect.
OPC
advocated that rather than being tried in regular courts, Boko Haram members
should face military court martial, while those found guilty should be
sentenced to death.
Reacting to
Leah’s travails and an offer of amnesty lately made by President Muhammadu
Buhari to Boko Haram, the Yoruba socio-cultural group, in a statement by its
President, Dr. Frederick Fasehun, on Wednesday, said that: “Offering amnesty to a world-acclaimed
terrorist organisation is the most unequivocal testimonial that government has
been merely spewing lies and propaganda about defeating Boko Haram.”
After
negotiations with government representatives, Boko Haram returned only 104
girls to Dapchi, amidst reports that five captives died in transit, while Miss
Sharibu, 15, was being held for refusing to renounce her Christian faith.
That the
Federal Government agreed to such a divisive deal was dangerous, insensitive
and unpatriotic, OPC said.
“Nobody should
make a martyr of that small girl,” OPC warned. “Her ordeal for being a
Christian makes many Nigerians to wonder if religion is why the government
appears to be foot-dragging negotiations for the release of the Chibok girls,
many of whom are Christians.”
Frowning at
the negotiated release of only captives of one faith, OPC lampooned government
and its negotiators for making a blunder of the entire Dapchi abduction by not
regarding injury to one girl as injury to all.
The Yoruba
socio-cultural group wants Leah back home with her parents for Easter.
OPC wondered
why Nigeria could not borrow a leaf from Israel that invaded Lebanon in 2006 to
recover two Jewish soldiers from Hezbollah, and from the French policeman who
died last week after taking the place of a hostage in a supermarket attacked by
a terrorist.
“The Leah
episode is an international embarrassment and is another heartbreaking proof,
plus others like the unchecked killings by Fulani herdsmen, that PMB belongs to
some people and not to others,” OPC said.
OPC asked
eminent Muslims like the Sultan of Sokoto and all Northern Emirs to bring
pressure on Boko Haram for the quick release of the young girl.
“There is no
other way for these Muslim leaders to convince the world of their disagreement
with Boko Haram’s philosophy and action than their calling for her immediate
return and their denunciation of this gross violation of Leah’s rights to life,
belief, movement, conscience and association, as guaranteed by the Nigerian
Constitution, the African Charter and United Nations Conventions.
“There is no
greater way to convince Leah and all other Nigerian children of other tribes
and faiths that Nigeria belongs to all of them than for her to safely return
home unmolested, safe and sound,” OPC said.
According to
the group, President Muhammadu Buhari’s recent offer of amnesty to Boko Haram
was an insult to the dead, maimed and internally displaced victims of the
anti-western education terrorists, as well as soldiers who lost their lives in
the fight against terrorism.
“If the
government says it has defeated Boko Haram, technically or completely, then
what is the rationale for offering pardon to these terrorists?” OPC said.
“Instead, government should commit its energy to totally breaking Boko Haram
and other insurgents, just like Iraq has done to ISIS.”
Describing
he amnesty offer as irrational and inciting, OPC said, “Boko Haram does not
deserve pardon because it is an unapologetic terrorist gang, whose unprovoked
and large-scale killing of innocent civilians places it in the league of
Al-Qaeda, Taliban, ISIS and ISIL. We demand that they be brought to justice.”
OPC cited
the life sentences handed down to Niger-Delta militants like Charles and Henry
Okah for a bombing incident, and accused Federal prosecutors of treating
apprehended Boko Haram and killer Fulani herdsmen with kid gloves by handling
them mild punishments.
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