“The bargaining table, not the battlefield, wins victory” – American civil rights leader, Jesse Jackson supports amnesty for Boko Haram

by Rachel Ogbu

files

American civil rights leader and Baptist minister, Rev. Jesse Jackson, has shown support for amnesty to members of the Islamic sect, Boko Haram.

Jackson who was in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State on Friday as a guest speaker in a lecture said Nigeria “is divided, not so much by religion, region and tribe but by greed.”

According to reports, the lectured was organised by the Bayelsa state government as part of activities marking the 2013 edition of Isaac Boro memorial anniversary, said if properly handled, the amnesty programme would tackle insecurity in the country.

“The amnesty must involve economic restitution, jobs and training. Within the United States, when there was civil unrest, there was a kind of state of emergency,” Jackson said.

“But I hope the country will soon get back away from the battlefield and get to the negotiation table. In the end, it will be the bargaining table, not the battlefield, that wins victory.You cannot battle forever.”

[READ: John Campbell: Escaping Nigeria’s cycle of violence ]

“You can bargain and resolve the conflict in the North. That is why l believe so much in non-violence. Non-violence does not mean fear, but courage and thinking, and it means the ability to figure it out and fight it out. You must have the ability to resolve conflict, and not fight aggressively. It must not resort into killing and being killed.”

“In Nigeria, too few have too much; too many have too little,” he said, adding that great nations “are measured not by how much they have but by how much they share.”

The Punch reports:

For the programme to work, he said all its terms and conditions must be honoured.

According to him, the amnesty must involve economic restitution and rebuilding of mosques and churches destroyed by the terrorists. He described such rehabilitation as a goodwill that would sustain coexistence in the country.

He said the state of emergency declared in three northern states should be as temporary as possible, advising Nigerians to abandon the battlefield and return to negotiation.

He noted that God had blessed Nigeria with intelligent, ambitious and industrious people, in addition to fertile soil, oil, fish and farmland. However, he said Nigeria should strive to give peace a chance, saying justice was key to peace.

“Peace does not equal quietness or the absence of noise. Often the oppressed are quiet, intimidated; their pains are suppressed but their predicament does not suppress their aspiration. Their thirst for justice and oneness must be quenched,” he said.

Jackson further regretted the economic irony in Nigeria, saying, “It is not right for a people to starve on a farm full of fertile soil, fruits and vegetables.”

 

Leave a reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

cool good eh love2 cute confused notgood numb disgusting fail