I am happy that the abducted Dapchi schools girls are all back
home but I am deeply troubled by the fact that one of them was left behind and
by the assertion that five of them died whilst in captivity. The day the
truth comes out about what really happened to the Chibok and Dapchi girls and
those that were behind these two scams, Nigerians will be shocked and they will
spit on the graves of Buhari and his collaborators.
Meanwhile I saw the pictures and watched the
video of Dapchi residents cheering on and waving at Boko Haram insurgents as
they dropped off the "missing" girls. It was clear to me that they
regarded the terrorists as heroes and I was compelled to ask myself the
following question, "Are we really one country?"
So many questions need to be answered. For
example how do you explain the Ghana Must Go bags that the
girls were carrying on their return? Did they go shopping in Sambisa Forest? Or is it
that when they abducted them they gave them time to pack all their clothes and
allowed them to bring them back when freed?
Another question that needs to be answered is this: why did the
Federal Government lie to the international media that the girls were dropped
off in Dapchi at 3.00am in the morning when the footage and pictures of their
return prove that the whole thing was done in broad daylight.
Again, why did the government inflate the number of the girls that
were abducted when the kidnapping took place six weeks ago. They claimed that
110 girls were missing after which the school and the parents set the record
straight and said that 105 girls were kidnapped and not 110.
Could it be that they knew that in order to make their story more
credible after money had changed hands and the girls were returned they had to
be able to say that at least 5 of the girls died whilst in captivity without
having to actually kill any of them?
This seems to me to be the only plausible reason for telling this
lie and sticking to it to the end even though it had been exposed for what it
was from the outset by the parents of the girls and the school authorities.
Finally why are the government telling the whole world more lies
by saying that no ransom was paid in return for the girls?
It is common knowledge in intelligence and security circles that
vast sums of money was paid to the terrorists and quite a lot of that money was
sent back to some of the government officials that were involved in the
negotiations and the scam as a kickback.
The point is that the whole thing was planned and agreed on well
before the abduction ever took place. That is why our Minister of Defence could
tell the Nigerian people just a few days ago that the girls would definitely be
released within two weeks at the most.
A few days later they were dropped off by their terrorist
abductors in Dapchi after all the soldiers and security personnel that had been
deployed to the area were withdrawn.
As the terrorists entered the town with the girls they were hailed
as heroes and received like freedom fighters by the locals and not as if they
were terrorists.
Some reports suggest that the massive crowd that received them
were even chanting "holy warriors" in Hausa as they marched through
the streets.
This reminds me of the words of the massive crowds that welcomed
Fidel Castro, Che Guevera and their rebel fighters in Batitsa's
pre-communist Cuba as they and their rebel fighters went from town to
town during the days of the revolution.
In those turbulent days and despite Batista's efforts to crush the
revolution with full American support, as the communist rebels went from town
to town they were met and encouraged with chants of "Viva Fidel! Viva
Che!" by ecstatic crowds and the rest is history.
Today in Dapchi and parts of northern Nigeria the crowds
chant "holy warriors" as Boko Haram march through their villages and
the streets of their towns. The implications of this are obvious and clear to
the discerning.
When they arrived in Dapchi the Boko Haram insurgents not only
interacted with the crowd openly with smiles on their faces but they also spoke
to the parents of the girls, apologised to them about what happened and told
them not to allow their children to go to school again.
Apart from the fact that they made vast sums of money in their
deal with Buhari, which they will now use to buy more arms and organise more
abductions, it is clear that this whole thing is the greatest public relations
stunt for Boko Haram ever since it began its operations seven years ago and
they have won many friends and admirers as a consequence of it.
The narrative that they would not have abducted the girls had they
known they were Muslims, though false, seems to have resonated with the local
Muslim population in the north and this can only help Boko Haram and swell its
ranks.
Someone is giving them very good advice and counsel and I suspect
that that person or group of persons are in government and are also in one or
more of our intelligence and security agencies.
They are working with Boko Haram in the same way that the dreaded
Pakistani intelligence agency, known as the Inter Services Intelligence (ISI),
works covertly and in collaboration and collusion with the jihadist terrorist
organisation that is known as the Taliban.
Whichever way you look at it and whatever you believe, there can
be little doubt that a terrible precedent has now been set and we can expect
many more Boko Haram abductions in the next few months after which money will
change hands again and the girls, as long as they are Muslims, will be released
and returned.
This is especially so because the 2019 elections are approaching
and the government needs to raise funds to build up its war chest.
Meanwhile, due to the massive amount of cash that they are receiving
from these exercises, the numbers and strength of Boko Haram itself will
increase enormously over the next few months until they become one of the most
effective and wealthy terrorist organisations in the world.
The Nigerian people and indeed the people of the West African
sub-region do not know it yet but the truth is that we are in trouble.
What Buhari and his friends have foisted on us is something that
few can comprehend and imagine and the truth is that we simply cannot handle
it.
Add that to the scourge of the Fulani herdsmen that has blighted
the country and afflicted our people and you will accept that unless something
gives and changes very quickly the future of our country is bleak.
A terrible precedent has been set and we shall rue the day that
this was done. The government believes that it will boost its ratings and
increase its popularity by these shameless scams, manouverings and subterfuge
but as the truth begins to unfold, and be rest assured that it eventually will,
the whole exercise will backfire badly. In the end it will lead to more enmity,
more division, more bitterness and more violence.
The truth is that the Dapchi incident is the biggest and most
dangerous scam and money-making venture in the history of Nigerian politics and
those poor little girls are just pawns in a much bigger game and wider picture.
The fact of the matter is that the Buhari administration are the
owners of both Boko Haram and the Fulani herdsmen. They trade in blood, death
and terror.
And if you really believe that a President and government that is
capable of pulling off the Dapchi scam with Boko Haram will allow a free and
fair election next year then you need to have your head examined.
The truth is that there is no law and there is no democracy
inNigeria.
This is a lawless and dangerous country where
anything can happen and anything is possible because the machinery of government has been hijacked by the emissaries of hell and the Kingdom of Darkness.
anything can happen and anything is possible because the machinery of government has been hijacked by the emissaries of hell and the Kingdom of Darkness.
The Guardian Newspaper reported that,
“Boko Haram shook hands with the parents and apologised for
abducting them. They said if they knew they were Muslim girls, they wouldn’t
have abducted them".
Can you imagine the implications of that?
I have been reliably informed that 15 year old Miss Leah Sharibu, the only Christian among the Dapchi girls, has not been released simply because she refused to renounce her faith and convert to Islam whilst in captivity.
I have been reliably informed that 15 year old Miss Leah Sharibu, the only Christian among the Dapchi girls, has not been released simply because she refused to renounce her faith and convert to Islam whilst in captivity.
The Buhari government told their Boko Haram friends to return the
Dapchi girls yet Leah Sharibu, the only Christian amongst them, was not
released because of her faith.
105 girls and one boy were taken and, according to CNN and BBC TV,
104 girls and one boy were returned home. But little Liya was not allowed to
come home. They decided to keep her in captivity.
I pray for her and her family. May God console them, give them
strength and avenge them. If she is still alive I pray that God touches their
hearts and that they release her.
I call on the Christian God, the Lord of the Universe, the Ancient
of Days, the Lord of Hosts, the Great Avenger and the God of all Flesh, to
avenge us and remove these cow lovers and sons of the Bonded Woman from the
seat and corridors of power.
I pray that the Lord delivers us and wipes away our tears and
collective shame.
Permit me to conclude this contribution with the words of Mr. Nata
Sharibu, who is Leah's father. He spoke the following words to Raypower Radio
and they were published in The Cable. He said,“All of
them were released. They said some were dead there and my daughter is alive but
they cannot release her because she is a Christian. They gave her the option of
converting in order to be released but she said she will never become a Muslim.
I am very sad but I am also jubilating too because my daughter did not denounce
her faith".
This is a courageous man and a great
soldier of Christ. May the Lord return his daughter, gladden his heart and
grant him peace and joy. God be with the young and beautiful Liya. God be with
us all.
By
Femi Fani-Kayode
*Fani-Kayode is former Minister of Aviation
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