The outgoing British High Commissioner to Nigeria
Dr. Andrew Pocock yesterday said the abducted Chibok school girls were located
but it’s practically impossible to rescue them safely.
He also said his county was not advocate for
dialogue with the Boko Haram sect, believed to have abducted the girls from
their hostels last year.
Pocock who visited Kaduna state Governor Nasir
El-Rufa’i made the remarks at an interactive session with journalists.
He said “Our ability to return the Chibok girls is
very limited. Well, after the abduction for some months it was clear that substantial
group of girls were together. It was also clear that they were by no means all
of them. It might be a group of 50 or 80; it’s very hard to tell. It presented
a terrible dilemma to everybody, attempting to rescue substantial group of
girls has two obvious problems; the risk to the attackers and to the girls.”
He said “It was possible that Boko Haram would have
killed those girls. And I am not sure whether the military capacity existed for
the rescue of these girls. So even though it was possible to say where some of
the girls might have been, they were beyond rescue in practical terms. I think
the only way for the return of the girls in my personal opinion is through the
defeat of Boko Haram.”
He said deployment of security forces to the
North-East to deal with insurgency was not enough adding that government must
apply economic measures.
The High Commissioner said it was not a better
option to invoke dialogue with sect because they didn’t constitute a legitimate
government.
“I
don’t think we will advocate talking to people that abduct innocent civilians
and cut peoples throat on video and show it to the rest of the world. But what
we could be talking about is disarmament and rehabilitation process for those
who are willing to put down their weapons,” he
added.
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