Speaking in an interview with Al Jazeera, Eeben Barlow said President
Buhari did not have any choice but to end the contract to rescue the
Chibok girls because he came under pressure from the US – a country he
said sponsored the then All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate’s
campaign in 2015.
Boko Haram insurgents abducted 276 girls from
Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok, Borno state in 2014. So far,
112 of the girls are still held captive by the insurgents. Fifty-seven
were lucky to escape while 107 were released in batches in
Swiss-coordinated negotiations.
In the build-up to the 2015
elections, the President Goodluck Jonathan administration made some
successes in combating Boko Haram but after the Buhari administration
came on board, the momentum went down temporarily.
Barlow,
chairman of Specialised Tasks, Training, Equipment and Protection
International (STTEP), a private army, said his army was initially
engaged to rescue the Chibok girls but that changed to combating Boko
Haram.
“Our initial aim was not Boko Haram per se, it was to
rescue the Chibok girls. They were the girls that were kidnapped and the
western response was #Savethegirls (#BringBackOurGirls),” he said.
“That
type of nonsense does not save girls. Unfortunately, these girls became
victims of a situation where the security had broken down in a specific
area, they were kidnapped and that was the first mission – rescue the
Chibok girls.
“We ended a selection process of the Nigerian
soldiers, the soldiers were retained after a selection process, they
were trained in a specific way to conduct a hostage rescue operation.
“However,
after about five or six weeks of the training of the hostage rescue
team we were asked to change our mission and that mission was to go to a
town called Maiduguri in north-east Nigeria that had come under severe
threat of Boko Haram and we rapidly had to transition what we were doing
and suddenly train an offensive force with the minimum of equipment.
“We
rushed to Maiduguri and we met with 7th infantry division commander, he
was under pressure, we finally understood the pressure he was under and
our suggestion to him that the force that we have trained which named
the 72nd mobile strike force would actually spearhead the division and
that is precisely what we did.
“The operation was in three
phases, the first phase was to cut a dividing line across north-eastern
Nigeria and isolate Boko Haram into two isolated areas and mop up. One
area in the south was the start and after that then mop up in the north.
The division will follow behind and occupy terrain.
“But we were
never allowed to execute the entire operation. In one month, we took
back terrain larger than the terrain of Belgium from Boko Haram. We were
not allowed to finish because it came at a time that governments were
in the process of changing.
“President Jonathan’s government saw
the entire Boko Haram contract, if we call it that, as a last grasp to
regain popularity. The incoming president, President Buhari was heavily
supported by a foreign government and one of the first missions was to
terminate our contract.
“We were told it was the United States
and they had actually funded President Buhari’s campaign and the
campaign manager for President Buhari came from the US.
“I’m not
saying the United States is bad, I understand foreign interests but I’d
have thought that a threat like Boko Haram on the integrity of Nigeria
ought to be a priority but it wasn’t.”
When asked why the US
allegedly aborted the mission, he said: “I think the US can answer that,
I have come to realise that when a foreign interest clashes with a
state’s interest and domestic interest, conflict is bound to ensue and
those conflicts continue with no end.”
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