Talks between the Federal Government and Islamist militant group Boko Haram aimed at securing the release of 200 abducted girls have not been jeopardized by a surge in violence, minister of foreign affairs Aminu Wali said on Monday. He said negotiations were continuing this week in Chad to try to free the school girls, who were seized by militants in April in a kidnapping that shocked the world. “There are still negotiations going on and we expect a lot of progress to be made. Soon we will announce exactly where we are,”
Wali told journalists after meeting French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius. The military high command announced a ceasefire 10 days ago ahead of the negotiations, but since then bombings, killings and kidnappings have continued in the northeastern part of the country where most of the operations of the sect occur. Suspected Boko Haram militants killed at least 17 people and abducted dozens in a series of attacks in the central region of Nigeria’s northeast Borno state over the weekend. At least 25 girls were kidnapped from a remote northeastern town a few days earlier.
However, the authorities say five years of insurgency have become mixed up with broader criminality, and that Boko Haram itself is highly fragmented. “Boko Haram are saying that those ones (attacks) were done by other rogues and criminals … Kidnapping has being going on in Nigeria for some time … by miscreants,” Wali said. He added that the government also suspected “dissidents of the main Boko Haram body” were trying to scupper the ceasefire.