Earlier this month, Australian counter terrorism officials conducted separate interviews with Stephen Davis and his wife. They wanted to know what Dr Davis had been doing in Nigeria for the past four months.
Dr Davis, a self-described "amateur peacemaker" from Perth, had embarked on a solo mission to rescue some of the more than 200 schoolgirls captured by Boko Haram militants in April.
"I was very confident when I left because I had spoken with some of the commanders and organised the release and handover of some of the girls," he said. "Otherwise I wouldn't have gone."
Stephen Davis in 2004 with Niger Delta rebels, on the eve of a peace deal with the government. If the Australian investigators asked Dr Davis to name his occupation, he may have struggled.
The 63-year-old, who has a doctorate in political geography, was a mining consultant to global resources company WMC and to petroleum giant Shell.
It was at Shell in the mid 2000s that he began
peace negotiations with rebels in the Niger Delta.
He then served as an advisor to two Nigerian
presidents, developing links with terror cells as
he negotiated on behalf of the government.
A devout Christian, he moved to Britain to work
as a canon in the Ministry of Reconciliation at
Coventry Cathedral, alongside future Archbishop
of Canterbury John Welby.
But when Dr Davis heard of the schoolgirl
kidnapping in the village of Chibok , he decided to
act.
He began remote negotiations with elements of
Boko Haram. In Nigeria, he then travelled with a
former Boko Haram guide in a beat-up car
across the country's north, setting up a hand-
over of girls that would contribute to a peace
deal with the government.
But each of the three attempted transfers were
thwarted by powerful political forces looking to
undermine the ruling party, Dr Davis said in a
telephone interview.
"They were sabotaged each one of them in the
end but we had commanders willing to do it."
The only success in his mission came after he
received a phone call from a man who had been
kidnapped by Boko Haram. They began
orchestrating an escape for a small number of
girls, with four eventually managing to cross
from a camp on the Cameroon side of the border
to a safe place in Nigeria.
"They're pretty heroic these young girls, pretty
amazing," he said. "What they went through is
staggering."
The changing face of Nigerian terrorism
Dr Davis said Boko Haram had become more
hardline since a peace deal with the government
collapsed last year
He accused members of Nigeria's political
opposition of sponsoring the more extreme
elements of the group in order to weaken the
ruling party.
"Some of the guys are uncontrolled in that they
are just beheading people before they even know
who the person is," he said.
"Or they go into a village and they'll disembowel
a pregnant woman and take the live foetus for a
ritual."
Dr Davis said the situation in Nigeria was
deteriorating faster than at any time in the past
12 years.
"When Boko Haram links up with ISIL - and there
is interaction between the two - and with
[terrorist group] al-Shabbab, that triangle is
going to be the new home of terrorism like the
world has not seen," he said.
"The guys before - there was no kidnapping, no
rape. They wouldn't kidnap women or children,
because that was contrary to the Koran. Now
these guys will do anything, they are a totally
different breed."
Dr Davis stressed the importance of negotiating
with terrorists, no matter their crimes.
"You've got to find common ground, you simply
have to," he said.
"There is so much ground you can shift, if you've
got time, and you can sit down again and again
and again."
But he doubted another deal involving the
release of kidnapped girls could be negotiated at
the moment, "because things have tightened up
so much".
"If it leaked out that they were willing to
negotiate the releases of the girls or to talk of a
peace deal, then other comma
Friday, August 29, 2014
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)

0 comments:
Post a Comment