President Muhammadu Buhari said on Wednesday
that Nigerian authorities were talking to Boko
Haram prisoners in their custody and could offer
them amnesty if the sect hands over more than
200 schoolgirls abducted last year.
Buhari added that he was confident “conventional”
attacks by the insurgents would be rooted out by
November — but cautioned that deadly suicide
attacks, some of them waged by children, were
likely to continue.
“The few (prisoners) we are holding, we are trying
to see whether we can negotiate with them for
the release of the Chibok girls,” Buhari told AFP in
an interview in Paris during a three-day visit to
France.
“If the Boko Haram leadership eventually agrees
to turn over the Chibok girls to us, the complete
number, then we may decide to give them (the
prisoners) amnesty.”
Boko Haram fighters stormed a school in Chibok,
Borno State, on April 14 last year, seizing 276 girls
who were preparing for end-of-year exams in an
abduction that shocked the world.
57 girls later escaped, but nothing has been heard
of the 219 others since May last year, when about
100 of them appeared in a Boko Haram video,
dressed in Muslim attire and reciting the Koran.
Boko Haram leader, Abubakar Shekau, has since
said they have all converted to Islam and been
“married off.”
Buhari, who has promised to stamp out the
group’s bloody six-year insurgency, said the
government would not release any prisoners
unless it was convinced it could “get the girls in
reasonably healthy condition.”
But he cautioned that negotiating with Boko
Haram militants was fraught with difficulties.
“We are trying to establish if they are bona fide,
how useful they are in Boko Haram, have they
reached a position of leadership where their
absence is of relevance to the operation of Boko
Haram,” he said.


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