Kaduna State Governor, Malam Nasir El-Rufai, on Tuesday, said he has reviewed his past position of 2014 when he suggested that Dr Goodluck Jonathan should negotiate for the release of Chibok girls after they were abducted by Boko Haram.
El-Rufai made
this known while responding to a widely circulated video of an interview he
granted in 2014 where he stated that all options must remain open in rescuing
the Chibok girls.
The governor
was being taunted on social media for now saying he will not negotiate the
release of students of the Federal College of Forestry Mechanisation and the
recently abducted students of Greenfield Private University in Kaduna.
The Governor,
on Tuesday, said while mass abductions were like a novelty in 2014, the facts
have now changed, adding that Nigeria’s journey since the 2014 Chibok tragedy
has proven that the solution to violent crimes, including terrorism and
banditry, is a robust response from the state and its coercive agencies.
“The quantum
of money paid as ransom following many negotiations with bandits have not
stopped kidnappings, reduced their frequency or deterred the criminals,” he
said.
In a
statement issued by his Special Adviser on Media and Communication, Muyiwa
Adekeye, the Kaduna State Governor stressed that negotiations and ransoms have
been undertaken, but have not stopped the criminals.
“It has only
encouraged them. It is only prudent to review one’s position when the facts
change, and the suggestion made by a citizen years ago cannot be taken as the
immutable answer to a serious problem that has evolved since 2014, no matter
the viral replays of the said video clip,” he said.
He said
following the experience of many states in the Northwest since 2015 that
included cattle rustling, kidnappings, killings and the devastation of
communities by criminals, several states had sought to negotiate their way out
of the problems by talking to bandits by paying them money or offering them amnesty.
He, however,
stressed that “this has not worked but only encouraged the criminals to press
ahead for a surrender of the public treasury to them. That is clearly not in
the public interest.”
“The fact
that criminals seek to hold us by the jugular does not mean we should surrender
and create an incentive for more crime.
“In today’s
Nigeria, it has become fashionable to treat the unlawful demands of bandits as
worthy of consideration and to lampoon people who insist that outlaws should be
crushed and not mollycoddled or availed the resources they can use to unleash
further outrages.”
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