Nigeria and Boko Haram agree to an immediate Ceasefire

The fate of more than 200 missing schoolgirls abducted by the
insurgents six months ago still is being negotiated, Defense Ministry spokesman
Maj. Gen. Chris Olukolade told The Associated Press.
But French President Francois Hollande welcomed the "good
news" and told a news conference in Paris that the girls' release
"could happen in the coming hours and days." France has been involved
in negotiations that led to the release of several of its citizens kidnapped by
Boko Haram in Cameroon.
Neither Hollande nor Nigerian government officials gave any
details.
Boko Haram negotiators "assured that the schoolgirls and
all other people in their captivity are all alive and well," Mike Omeri,
the government spokesman on the insurgency, told a news conference.
The chief of defense staff, Air Marshal Alex Badeh, announced
the truce Friday and ordered his troops to immediately comply with the
agreement.
"Already, the terrorists have announced a cease-fire in furtherance
of their desire for peace. In this regard, the government of Nigeria has, in
similar vein, declared a cease-fire," Omeri said.
But there was no immediate word from Boko Haram, which limits
its public engagement to video announcements by its leader, Abubakar Shekau.
Last year, when a government minister charged with negotiations announced an
agreement, the group quickly published a video with Shekau denying it. He said
at that time that whoever the government negotiated with did not speak for him,
and that he would never talk to infidels.
The United States, which had sent a team including hostage
negotiators to help free the girls, said it could not confirm a cease-fire.
"We cannot independently confirm that at this point," deputy
spokeswoman Marie Harf told a news conference in Washington.
Boko Haram — the group's nickname means "education is
sinful" — drew international condemnation with the April kidnapping of 276
girls and young women at a boarding school in the remote northeastern town of
Chibok. Dozens escaped in the first couple of days, but 219 remain missing.
It could take days for word of a cease-fire to get to fighters
of Boko Haram, which is broken into several groups. They include foreigners
from neighboring countries Chad, Cameroon and Niger, where the insurgents also
have camps.
Omeri confirmed there had been direct negotiations this week
about the release of the abducted girls. Another official said the talks took
place in Chad with Danladi Ahmadu, who was identified as the Saudi Arabia-based
secretary general of Boko Haram. The official spoke on condition of anonymity
because he is not authorized to talk to reporters.
But two people involved in previous negotiations with the
extremists said they had never heard of Ahmadu. Both spoke on condition their
names were not published because of the sensitivity of the issue.
Doubts also were expressed on Twitter by Ahmad Salkida, a
Saudi-based Nigerian journalist living in self-exile because of his links with
top leaders of Boko Haram.
Salkida
suggested the cease-fire announcement was a political ploy as President
Goodluck Jonathan prepares to announce he will run again for the presidency in
February elections. Boko Haram leaders are "miffed," Salkida tweeted,
that people are being "easily encased in deceit."
The
chief government negotiator, Ambassador Hassan Tukur, said the Boko Haram
representatives he had talked with had provided bona fides by freeing hostages.
In an
interview with the BBC, Tukur said Boko Haram had promised to release Chinese
construction workers kidnapped in Cameroon and the wife of a vice prime
minister of Cameroon. Cameroon announced Oct. 11 that 27 hostages, including 10
Chinese and the Cameroonian official's wife, had been released.
"They
promised us ... they would release (them) ... And they have done so,"
Tukur said on BBC radio.
Boko
Haram had been demanding the release of detained extremists in exchange for the
girls. Jonathan originally said he could not countenance a prisoner swap.
The
original #BringBackOurGirls protest movement in Abuja, Nigeria's capital,
called for confirmation of the truce from the president.
The
principal of the school from which the girls were abducted, Asabe Kwambura, had
mixed feelings about the news. "If what we hear is true, I will the
happiest person in the world to see these girls of mine return home in one
piece," she told The Associated Press.
"But
many of us are still forced to doubt government" she added, saying the
girls should long have been rescued.
Dozens
more schoolgirls and boys, young women and men have been kidnapped by the
extremists in a 5-year-old insurgency.
Jonathan
told the United Nations last month that the extremists have killed 13,000
civilians. Hundreds of thousands have been driven from their homes, many of
them farmers, causing a food emergency in the northeast of the country where
the insurgency is centered.
In
August, Boko Haram began seizing and holding territory where it declared a
caliphate, apparently copying the Islamic State group fighting in Iraq and
Syria.
But the
tide appears to have turned in recent weeks, with the military wresting some
towns from the extremists and reporting to have killed hundreds of Boko Haram
fighters.
Culled
from associated press AP
Comments