Amnesty is underway for bandits who have unleashed a reign of terror on many of the seven states in the North-west.
Thousands
of people have either been kidnapped or killed in the states by
non-state actors who have seized control of communities and invaded
villages, farmlands.Worst hit by the insecurity in the region are Zamfara, Katsina, Kaduna and Sokoto states.
Rising
from a security meeting Thursday, governors from the zone and the
Inspector General of Police (IG), Mr. Mohammed Adamu, resolved to grant
amnesty to the bandits to pave the way for dialogue for peace to reign
in the region.
Governors at the meeting, held in Katsina, were
Mallam Nasir el-Rufai (Kaduna), Hon. Aminu Tambuwal (Sokoto), Abdullahi
Umar Ganduje (Kano), Alhaji Mohammed Mattawale (Zamfara), Alhaji
Abubakar Atiku Bagudu (Kebbi) and the host, Mallam Aminu Masari.
The
governors have also banned the activities of a vigilance group,
Volunteers (Yan-sakai), in the region and urged them to surrender all
the arms and ammunition in their possession.
They also described
the volunteers as illegal group, and admonished them to distance
themselves from any security issue in the country.In a
communiqué issued Thursday at the end of a five-hour meeting, which was
read by Masari, the governors said they reviewed various steps so far
taken at individual state levels with a view to restrategising and
improving on them for lasting peace in the region and country at large.
“The
meeting resolved that Yan-sakai (Volunteers) should stop their illegal
activities. They have no legal backing and the police will arrest
volunteers who go about killing and molesting people in the country,” he
said.
Masari said the volunteers should surrender all the arms
and ammunition in their possession to the authorities and also release
all people in their captivity “because we learnt that some people were
taken as hostage by both Yan-sakai and bandits.”“The
families should be allowed to be attending market places, worship places
and go about their normal activities provided they don’t carry arms
into public places. They should conduct their affairs peacefully and
leave peacefully.
“In order to further peace and harmony
within communities, those who stole animals from communities and people
living among them should return them through government or the
association of Miyetti Allah. This is necessary because in order to
ensure peace and understanding sacrifices must be made by both sides,”
he added.
According to him, the governors also resolved to
consider dialogue and amnesty for the bandits for peace to reign in the
region, stating that only a collective and united approach to the issue
of dialogue and amnesty in the North-west could end the menace.
On
his part, Adamu said the police would work with the governors in the
implementation of the resolutions, adding that nobody is allowed to
attack unjustly.“You are not allowed to kill; so, the
Yan-sakai have to be very careful. Never again should they come out and
attack anybody because anybody that does that we will pursue that person
and make sure we bring such person to book.
“And we now resolved
within ourselves that banditry does not pay; those of us in the bush
are free to come to town and markets and do whatever business they want
to do without any molestation,” he said.
He, however, warned
repented bandits against returning to crime, saying: “the freedom given
out does not mean that you should continue to do the banditry. If you
are not ready to repent and to work within these resolutions it means
you want to test the resolve of the states.”“Our meeting today
is the review of what we have been doing for a very long time. Before
today, there have been a lot of initiatives within the North-western
part of this country on how to cooperate and stop the killings that has
taken place between one community and the other,” he added.
He
said the approaches so far taken by government and security agencies
would end bloodletting and enable farmers, business owners and other
citizens to carry out their responsibilities without hindrance.
“We
know we are farmers; we should be able to go back and farm. We know we
are cattle breeders; we should be able to have opportunities to breed
our cattle without molestations.
“And that is why we are here
today with other stakeholders to brainstorm and add to the successes
that we have achieved so that at the end of the day, other parts of the
country will emulate what has been done in the North-western part of
this country so that there will be total peace within this country,”
Adamu said.
Besides the governors and the IG, the meeting was
also attended by commissioners of police of five North-west states,
members of Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria (MACBAN)
and representative of Niger State governor.
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