Soyinka said that the allegations made by Stephen Davis, the Australian negotiator who came to Nigeria to secure release of the Chibok schoolgirls who were abducted by Boko Haram militants in their school over four months ago, should not be dismissed off-hand. He said he had worked with Davis during the Niger Delta crisis but was not involved with the priest’s efforts with Boko Haram.
I know Stephen Davis, I
worked in the background with him during efforts to resolve the insurrection in
the Delta region under President Umaru
Yar’Adua. I have not been involved in his recent labours for a number of
reasons. As I revealed in earlier statements, I have interacted with the late
National Security Adviser, General Azazi, on occasion among others. I am therefore compelled to warn that
anything that Stephen Davis claims to have uncovered cannot be dismissed out of
hand.
The professor expressed his
total disdain for Boko Haram and his persistent calls for the terrorist group
to be dealt with.
From the very outset, in
several lectures and other public statements, I have advocated one response and
one response only to the earliest, still putative depredations of Boko Haram
and have decried any proceeding that smacked of appeasement. There was a time
to act – several times when firm, decisive action, was indicated. There are
certain steps which, when taken, place an aggressor beyond the pale of
humanity, when we must learn to accept that not all who walk on two legs belong
to the community of humans – I view Boko Haram in that light.It is no comfort
to watch events demonstrate again and again that one is proved to be right.
On the complicity of former
Borno Governor Modu Sheriff as a sponsor of the Boko Haram sect, he says:
I have no doubt whatsoever,
and I believe that the evidence is overwhelming. Femi Falana can safely assume
that he has my full backing – and that of a number of civic organizations – if
he is compelled to go ahead and invoke the legal recourses available to him to
force Sheriff’s prosecution. The evidence in possession of Security Agencies –
plus a number of diplomats in Nigeria – is overwhelming, and all that is left
is to let the man face criminal persecution. It is certain he will also take
many others down with him.
Soyinka says that the
allegations against General Ihejirika as a sponsor of the dreaded sect should
be subjected to an independent investigation and the findings made public. He
also revealed that he knows the name of the alleged CBN sponsor of terrorism in
the country and he was ready to reveal the name of the person.
Stephen Davis also mentions
a Boko Haram financier within the Nigerian Central Bank. Independently we are
able to give backing to that claim, even to the extent of naming the
individual. In the process of our enquiries, we solicited the help of a foreign
embassy whose government, we learnt, was actually on the same trail, thanks to
its independent investigation into some money laundering that involved the
Central Bank. That name, we confidently learnt, has also been passed on to
President Jonathan. When he is ready to abandon his accommodating policy
towards the implicated, even the criminalized, an attitude that owes so much to
re-election desperation, when he moves from a passive “letting the law to take
its course” to galvanizing the law to take its course, we shall gladly supply
that name.

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