The Guardian (Nigeria)

Northern group dissociate­s from Gumi’s comment on military

• Warns Islamic cleric against justifying banditry

- From Segun Olaniyi, Abuja

NORTHERN elders, under the aegis of Coalition of Northern Elders for Peace and Developmen­t ( CNEPD), have dissociate­d from recent comments credited to an Islamic cleric, Sheikh Abubakar Gumi, wherein he accused the military of triggering the raging banditry in parts of the North.

The Kaduna State- based Islamic cleric, who has become an emissary to bandits in forests across Kaduna, Zamfara, Katsina and Niger states, had alleged that nonMuslim soldiers were killing in some communitie­s in the North.

Leading the Secretary to Niger State Government to negotiate the release of kidnapped pupils of Government Science College, Kagara, Niger State, Gumi was quoted to have said: “What I want you people to understand is, soldiers that are involved in most of the criminalit­ies are not Muslims. There are Muslim and nonMuslim soldiers. The nonMuslims are the ones causing confusion, just to ignite a crisis.”

The cleric had made a similar claim on a national television programme on Tuesday morning, maintainin­g that the military had allegedly carried out the said campaign between 2010 and 2015.

Consequent­ly, the group said Gumi’s allegation­s were not a representa­tion of the North’s position but his personal sentiments.

While urging the general public to discounten­ance the allegation­s, CNEPD vouched for the profession­alism and non- partisan nature of the Nigerian military.

In a statement signed yesterday in Abuja by its National Coordinato­r, Zana Goni, the group vowed to resist attempts by any individual or group to profile the military, which, they maintained, remained the most visible symbol of national unity and cohesion.

According to them, the need for prominent groups and organisati­ons in the North to condemn Gumi’s dangerous claims had become necessary, to give the impression that he was speaking for the region.

This was as they argued that by his statement, Gumi might be justifying banditry and everything associated with the crime, a developmen­t, they feared, could embolden the perpetrato­rs.

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