Hostages may still be alive –Minister
Minister of Information, Labaran
Maku
The
Minister of Interior, Mr. Abba Moro, has said that the reported killing of
seven kidnapped foreign construction workers by a militant Islamic group,
Jama’atu Ansarul Musilimina Fi Biladis Sudan, remains unconfirmed.
“As
long as it (killing) remains unconfirmed, efforts will be made to ensure their
rescue and security,” Moro told the Hausa service of the British
Broadcasting Corporation on Monday.
“I
want us to also think that belief is quite different from confirmation. And
maybe the affected countries believe that was what happened, but on its part,
the country where it is said to have happened, based on what it sees, is doing
the best it can in ensuring the men are freed, who it hopes are alive.”
But
his belief and comments by his Information counterpart , Labaran
Maku, as well as security agencies showed that there
was confusion in government circle over the fate of the kidnapped
foreigners.
Shortly
before the Interior Minister spoke, JAMBS, in order to prove its claim,
posted a video of what it said was the bodies of the foreigners ( a
Briton, an Italian, a Greek and four Lebanese) on the Internet.
The
video released by the al Qaeda-linked group and dated March 9 shows a
gunman standing next to a pile of bodies, then close-ups of their faces lit up
by a torch.
It
carries the Arabic title, “The killing of the seven Christian hostages in
Nigeria” although the religion of the deceased was not clear.
A
caption underneath the video says in Arabic and in English: “In the name
of Allah Most Beneficent Most Merciful.”
JAMBS
had also said it killed the hostages in response to attempts by
Britain and Nigeria to free them although Italy and Greece said
there had been no such attempt this time around.
Contradicting
JAMBS claim, a senior presidential aide told the Guardian
of London that no rescue raid was under way or in the pipeline with any
other governments.
“The
(Nigerian) government had zero indication of where the hostages were being
held. We would have mounted a raid if we had known,” the aide told the Guardian
of London.
He
added that the speed at which events had unfolded over the last few days
“caught (the government) on the back foot.”
Two
security sources told the Guardian the hostages might have been killed when
their captors panicked, mistakenly believing British intelligence operatives
based in Nigeria had located them.
A
secret service official said that three of the hostages were believed to
have been seriously ill during their captivity.
However,
as the United Kingdom, Italy and Greece confirmed the killings on Sunday,
the Federal Government made no immediate comment.
Efforts
to get the Presidency’s reaction yielded no positive
result as the telephone lines of the Special Adviser to the President on
Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, was switched off.
It
was learnt on Monday that Abati was out of the country.
Also,
the Special Assistant to the President on Public Affairs, Dr. Doyin Okupe, did
not pick his call when one of our correspondents tried to reach him on
Sunday.
The
spokesman for the Foreign Affairs Ministry, Mr. Ogbole Ahmedu-Ode, had
said he had not been briefed and therefore could not make any
comment on the reported killings.
The
Information minister declined to make comments on the fate of the seven
hostages when confronted by journalists in Abuja on Monday.
I
don’t have the full brief to brief you,” Maku said as he walked out
of the Presidential Villa, Abuja where he had earlier attended a meeting with
President Goodluck Jonathan.
When
he was further asked to comment on the listing of Nigeria as a terrorist state
by France over the incident, the minister kept mum.
When
one of our correspondents contacted the Director of Defence Information, Col.
Mohammed Yerima, on Monday , he asked, “How can we confirm? There is nothing to
confirm. We don’t have comment. We are saying we do not have comment.”
Also,
the Bauchi State Police Command said it had no clue on the condition of the
seven foreigners said to be Setraco workers.
The
command said it had yet to establish the alleged murder of the foreigners
who were abducted from their camp in Jama’are, Bauchi State on February 17,
2013 by JAMBS members.
The
state Police Public Relations Officer, Hassan Mohammed, told one of
our correspondents on Monday that the command had no evidence that the
hostages had been killed.
“We
don’t have any information on the hostages’ death; honestly I can’t tell you
anything about it because I don’t know, we are still investigating the claims
by the sect. But for now, we don’t know the situation of things,” he
said.
It
was gathered that security agencies were still combing Bauchi and the
neighbouring states for the abducted Setraco workers.
JAMBS
killed a British and an
Italian hostage in North-West Nigeria during a failed rescue mission by British
and Nigerian forces a year ago.
A
German kidnapped by an Islamist group in January 2012 was also killed later in
the year during a raid on his location.
A
French national is being also held by the group, while another family of seven
kidnapped in northern Cameroon are being held by a group claiming to be Boko
Haram.
Security
officials say JAMBS split from Boko Haram in January 2012, after
the latter launched a devastating attack on the city of Kano that killed 186
people, mostly Muslims.
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