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Why granting amnesty to Boko Haram members is totally wrong! – Lawmaker, Ali Ndume.

Why granting amnesty to Boko Haram members is totally wrong! - Lawmaker, Ali Ndume. 2

Nigerian Lawmaker, Senator Ali Ndume representing Borno South Senatorial District believes that Boko Haram members shouldn’t not be granted amnesty when the war against insurgency is still on.

Ali Ndume said Nigerians are not happy with the way the “Operation Safe Corridor” is being handled. He believes that all the Terrorists who surrendered to the military ought to brought in, profiled and kept as prisoners of war.

He added that the best practice should be granting then pardon when the war is finally over.

Ali Ndume said that this current practice being operated by the military won’t bring peace desired by the affected areas in the region.

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The Lawmaker said this recently in Abuja. He said;

Majority of Nigerians are against the way that the Operation Safe Corridor is being conducted. It is wrong to be granting amnesty to repentant terrorists when the war is still far from being over. The war must be over before we start doing that. The military could open up the corridor, allow everybody to enter and start profiling them and keep them somewhere as prisoners of war and train them. After the war, they could be reconciled with the victims of their unfortunate actions.

That is what is being done all over the world. The current arrangement where the repentant insurgents are granted amnesty without apologising to the victims and the state, cannot bring about the required peace.

Ali Ndume

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Just last week, over 1,000 Kawuri people, along the Maiduguri-Bama Road, about 40 kilometres away from Maiduguri, returned to their town. Kawuri was where the insurgents massacred 85 people in one day sometime in February 2014.

I was at Ngwoche with the governor and preparations were at the final stage to return the displaced persons on October 15. The government is also making efforts to return the people of four other communities at the various IDP camps by the end of the year.

We call on the federal and state government to provide the people with farm implements, fertilizers and other agricultural extension services for them to engage in dry season farming because they have missed the raining season now.

In Gwoza, one Colonel Lamidi, a Yoruba man who has been there now for three years as the battalion commander, bought two golf cars and converted them to gun trucks due to lack of equipment to fight the insurgents. The same Colonel Lamidi has been going after the insurgents with the golf cars he reconstructed to gun trucks.

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Apart from this, the soldiers are also engaged in civil activities. Some soldiers with a diploma and degree certificates are now teaching school children whose parents have returned to some of the affected communities. They even hired 50 volunteers, who they are paying about N30, 000 per month from their salaries and allowances, to teach in some schools also.

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