The governor
of Borno State, Kashim Shettima, has come down hard on his predecessor, Ali
Sheriff, accusing him of inaction that he said led to the escalation of Boko
Haram insurgency.
Mr.
Shettima, who stated this on Monday at the annual lecture in honour of late
Head of State, Murtala Mohammed in Abuja, said he was responding to a
“political statement” by Mr. Sheriff in which he said Boko Haram did not hold
any territory in Borno when he handed over power.
The
governor, who delivered a paper “Managing the Boko Haram crisis in Borno state,
experiences and lessons for a multi party, multi ethnic and multi religious
Nigeria”, said Boko Haram leader, Mohammed Yusuf, took advantage of Mr.
Sheriff’s failure to provide leadership to declare a jihad.
“The fact is
that Sheriff allowed his ego to overcome his action and failed to settle the
differences between armed forces and members of Yusuffiya movement at the
time,” he said.
The governor
recalled that he was aware the late Boko Haram leader, Mr. Yusuf, was a
constant critic of the Sheriff administration.
He said that
in July 2009, some armed security agencies clashed with members of the sect over
the use of helmets and shot 17 of them.
“A governor
should have at least visited victims of the shooting to lay foundation for
peace and he should have set up a commission of inquiry just like what Governor
El Rufai did in Kaduna recently,” he said.
“He chose to
mismanage the incident. He did not send anyone or settle the medical bill of
anyone and he played into their hands. That gave Yusuf an opening to declare
jihad.”
Mr. Sherrif
has repeatedly been accused of being a Boko Haram sponsor. He denies the
allegation.
(Premium
Times)
No comments:
Post a Comment