Catholic Archbishop, Cardinal John Onaiyekan, yesterday, backed the
call by the Sultan of Sokoto for the granting of amnesty to members of
the Boko Haram sect, as a means of achieving peace in the north.
However, before the pardon, the clergy wants members of the sect to
seek repentance for the large number of persons and property they have
destroyed without any justification.
Cardinal Onaiyekan, who stated this in his Easter massage, noted that
although government had power to give state pardon to criminals, it
must be done with caution.
According to the Cardinal, the sect must seek forgiveness and
repentance, so that it would not appear as if the members had done the
right thing and were being persuaded to seek pardon from the government.
He said, “as regards the case of an offer of amnesty to the Boko
Haram, I believe that we should not throw away outright the
consideration of such amnesty. Faced with an intractable problem, we
have to explore all possible avenues of solution. The security response
in terms of arms, gadgets and trained personnel is useful and necessary,
but obviously not enough on its own.
“Government does well to reach out to all political forces and
currents, so that the nation can be on the same political page and
jointly address this common menace, which terrorism is.
“Under such an atmosphere of common efforts, the call for amnesty
would seem to me quite appropriate and even necessary. I therefore see
the call of the Sultan as an invitation to further discussion and
dialogue among Nigerians to sharpen the focus of government action in
this matter.
“That discussion has started, for which we should thank the Sultan
and his courageous proposal. In every conflict, a time comes when
dialogue and talking must be brought into the equation, in view of final
solution.
“But before the Boko Haram can be seriously considered for amnesty,
they must meet the two conditions mentioned earlier for forgiveness,
namely repentance and amendment. Before they are eligible for any
amnesty, they must at least admit that they were wrong to be killing
innocent people, whatever may have been their grievances. If this is not
done, they could well continue to feel that they did the right thing
and perhaps, it is the rest of us who ought to beg them for pardon.”
The Archbishop urged the government to address the growing problems
of poverty and unemployment and promote good governance so as to give
the people justifiable reasons for electing them into the office they
are occupying.
Govt should address poverty, unemployment
“We have to find ways of getting ourselves out of the tight grip of
these two evils (insecurity and massive corruption). It will require
not only legal approach but also wise political moves and quiet
diplomatic efforts as well as the input from the spiritual leadership of
the country.
“This means that the problem of Nigeria is the problem of all of us
and we must find a way of putting our heads together to change our ways
of doing things so that a great nation can emerge.
On the pardon granted the former Bayelsa State governor, the Onaiyekan said it was a setback to the fight against graft.
Slams FG for Alams pardon
“Obviously, the State must handle very carefully whatever powers it
has to forgive criminals otherwise the whole structure of law and order
in the society will be seriously compromised. There may be political
considerations but these cannot be allowed to overthrow moral
imperatives.
“It is alleged that a lot of the stolen money is not lost. It is said
to be somewhere invested in one way or the other. That money belongs
to the Nigerian people and it must be given back to them. How this will
be done should be part of the conditions that would have to be worked
out in the process for pardon.
“Whatever government decides to do in this matter, it must not forget
that the issue of corruption in high places is of major concern to
Nigerians. Much has been said about fighting corruption. But people are
fast losing confidence in the sincerity of government to turn the tide.
“Pardon for high profile corruption cases will certainly reduce
further whatever is left of the confidence of the people. This has
serious political and social fall-out that government cannot afford to
ignore”.
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