ABUJA— A man claiming to be a
“Boko Haram’s spiritual teacher” has told the BBC World Service radio that the
hundreds of girls abducted in Chibok on April 15 are “feeding very well” and in
“good state of health.”
The man, who had his voice
disguised in the interview, also said that although most of the Christians
among the girls had been converted to Islam, those who objected were not
forced.
However, he reiterated the sect’s
previous position that unless the Federal Government frees members of the sect
imprisoned in government facilities, the Chibok schoolgirls would not be
released.
He said: “I joined the group in
2004. We are pushing for a Sharia state. We want the Nigerian government to
release our members. If they release our members today, we will release the
girls tomorrow. You will see all of them as Abubakar Shekau, our leader,
promised the media.
“Those who agreed to convert to
Islam have been converted and those who refused have been left alone. There is
no forced conversion in Islam.
“Allah commands us to treat
everyone equally. We are not discriminating against them; we treat all of them
equally. They all are healthy. They feed well.
“Under Islam, killing women and
children is not acceptable. But if they are fighting you, then you must fight
them. But if they do not attack you, you leave them. We only go after those who
give information to our enemy.”
The report of the positive
condition of the girls comes a day after coordinator of the National
Information Centre, Mike Omeri, said the abducted girls were close to regaining
their freedom, as security agents have been obtaining useful information from
the arrested chief intelligence officer of Boko Haram.
Jonathan faults critics
Meanwhile, President Goodluck
Jonathan has lambasted those criticising him and his administration for not
doing enough to rescue the over 200 Chibok schoolgirls.
Jonathan’s defence is contained in
a statement by Presidential Spokesman, Dr. Reuben Abati, to the Washington
Post.
In the 187 word article, Abati
claimed that contrary to the allegation that President Jonathan was not doing
enough to confront the Boko Haram threat and rescue the schoolgirls,
Nigeria was aggressively confronting the insurgents with a view to bringing
back the girls.
Jonathan’s response followed a July
3 editorial by the Washington Post, accusing him of little effort to bring
back the missing girls.
Abati said while Jonathan was
working quietly to rescue the girls, it was wrong to accuse him of not doing
enough in that regard.
He said the strategy being adopted
by Jonathan was to ensure that the girls’ lives were not put at risk.
He wrote: “The claim that the
President has a “do nothing” attitude toward rescuing the girls is no different
than what was written about President Obama’s decision not to disclose his
efforts to seize and arrest the alleged ringleader of the 2012 terrorist
attacks in Benghazi, Libya, that killed four Americans — until he did just
that.
“Mr. Jonathan won’t put the lives
of these girls at risk by publicly revealing details of the recovery operation
for the sake of satisfying his critics.
“Even before the abductions, the
President was engaged in international intelligence sharing involving West
Africa, Europe and the United States, and he had also launched the Counter
Terrorism Centre in Nigeria.
“He has been working intensely on
the very challenging situation posed by Boko Haram since assuming
office, including declaring a state of emergency in May 2013 in the three most
affected northern states.”
SOURCE: VANGUARD NEWS
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