Wakil, a former member of the Dialogue and Peaceful Resolution of Security Challenges in the North, set up by former President Goodluck Jonathan, said the insurgents will soon leave the bush and return home.
The human rights lawyer and mediator, who disclosed this at a fund raising for her foundation in Maiduguri, the Borno State capital, on Saturday, maintained that the islamist insurgents would “someday surrender their arms and return home.”
She noted that the insurgents were willing to give up their arms, insisting that she would continue to support efforts to return peace to the troubled zone.
Referring to the insurgents as her ‘sons,’ Wakil stated that she was certain that some of the sects were willing to surrender their arms and go back home, even as she assured that she would not relent in her mediating role to ensure that everybody in Boko Haram’s bondage were released.
According to her, “All my sons in the bush will come home. They are going to surrender their arms one day and go back to their homes. I will continue to support efforts to return peace to the troubled state.”
Speaking on what her foundation represents, the lawyer pointed out that the foundation was established to care for victims of the insurgency, including orphans and displaced persons.
Wakil said that the foundation will continue to intervene in the areas of education, health care and psychosocial support.