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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