Boko Haram and the Federal Government have agreed to a
ceasefire.
Chief
of Defense Staff Alex Badeh issued an order Friday, telling all service chiefs
“to comply with the ceasefire agreement between Nigeria and Boko Haram in all
theaters of operations.”
The
text went out after Danladi Ahmadu, who calls himself the secretary-general of
Boko Haram, told VOA that a cease-fire agreement had been reached.
Earlier,
Ahmadu and a close advisor to President Goodluck Jonathan, Ambassador Hassan
Tukur, told VOA that the sides were holding talks in Saudi Arabia, aided
Chadian President Idriss Deby and high-level officials from Cameroon.
It
would be recalled that earlier today there were insinuations of a meeting being held between the Federal government and
the Islamic sect.
Those
talks also focused on the release more than 200 girls abducted by Boko Haram
six months ago. There was no immediate word on the fate of the girls.
Ahmadu,
who said he is at a location on the Nigerian-Chadian border, said the girls are
“in good condition and unharmed.”
On
April 14, dozens of Boko Haram fighters stormed a secondary school in the remote
northeastern village of Chibok, kidnapping around 270 girls. Fifty-seven
managed to escape.
Boko
Haram leader “Abubakar Shekau” later threatened to sell the remainder as slave
brides, vowing they would not be released until militant prisoners were freed
from jail.
Ahmadu
would not elaborate on the conditions under which the girls would be
freed. The Saudi government is not involved in the negotiations.
Nigerian
President Jonathan has been criticized at home and abroad for his slow response
to the kidnapping and for the inability of Nigerian troops to quell the
violence by the militants, seen as the biggest security threat to Africa’s top
economy and leading energy producer.
Boko
Haram has said it is fighting to establish an Islamic state in Muslim-majority
northern Nigeria.
The
group has launched scores of attacks in the past five years, targeting markets,
bus stations, government facilities, churches and even mosques. Militants
recently took over some towns in the northeast for what the group’s leader said
would be an Islamic caliphate.
The
Nigerian military says the man who appeared in Boko Haram videos as Abubakar
Shekau was actually an impostor, and that the real Shekau was killed several
years ago.
It
says the impostor was killed last month during a battle in the town of
Konduga. A new video of the man appeared a few days later but the
military has stood by its assertion that the Boko Haram leader is dead.
Source:aitonlinetv
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