Abducted schoolgirls: Is Nigeria ready to negotiate with Boko Haram?
Nigeria sent mixed messages regarding Boko Haram's proposal to exchange the schoolgirls for imprisoned terrorists. But if it does negotiate, that would follow a pattern set by many countries.
Nigeria sent mixed messages regarding Boko Haram's proposal to exchange the schoolgirls for imprisoned terrorists. But if it does negotiate, that would follow a pattern set by many countries.
The Nigerian government鈥檚 mixed messaging to the Islamist extremist group holding more than 250 schoolgirls 鈥 first that it is not interested in Boko Haram鈥檚 proposed exchange of the hostages for imprisoned terrorists, then that 鈥渁ll options鈥 are on the table 鈥 is just the beginning of the abduction鈥檚 resolution.
After all, governments that oppose negotiating with terrorists often end up changing their stance, some diplomatic experts say. They also point out there was a reason hostage negotiators were included in the team of experts the US sent to Nigeria last week to assist in resolving the crisis.
鈥淎 lot of countries say they won鈥檛 negotiate with terrorists, but very often it鈥檚 just a starting position,鈥 says Wayne White, a former State Department intelligence analyst who is now an adjunct scholar at the Middle East Institute in Washington.
鈥淕overnments tend to say they aren鈥檛 going to do it [negotiate],鈥 he adds, 鈥渨hen at the same time they are in the midst of their tactical calculations about the many different elements鈥 of a hostage negotiation.
The leader of Boko Haram released a video Monday purporting to show dozens of the abducted schoolgirls in full veils and reciting prayers. In the 17-minute video the group鈥檚 leader, Abubakar Shekau, says the girls have converted to Islam. He further asserts they will only be released as part of a deal for militants being held by the Nigerian government.
鈥淲e will never release [the girls] until after you release our brethren,鈥 Mr. Shekau says. The Nigerian government has detained hundreds of suspected Boko Haram militants, and in recent months fighters from the group have stormed a number of prisons in an effort to free detained comrades.
Some Nigerian officials initially rejected any exchange involving a release of detained terrorists. Later Monday, however, a senior government official with the information ministry said the government was considering 鈥渁ll options鈥 for securing the girls鈥 release.
That followed claims by some Nigerian sources over the weekend that the government has established 鈥渋ndirect鈥 contact with Boko Haram. Officials in the north where the girls were kidnapped reportedly told journalists they understood some communication was under way between the captors and the government.
Whether or not that is true, specialists like Mr. White say such contact would follow a pattern set by countries that insist they will not negotiate with terrorists.
One example often cited is Israel, which officially refuses to negotiate with terrorists, but which is known to have worked out exchanges with groups, such as Hamas, that it considers terrorist organizations. In 2011 Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu agreed to release more than 1,000 prisoners in exchange for one Israeli soldier, Cpl. Gilad Shalit, who had been kidnapped by Hamas.
鈥淐ountries indeed do it 鈥 and then often find themselves subject to criticism from countries that do it, too,鈥 says White. Israel is the latest country to offer assistance to Nigeria in freeing the girls.
The US lists Boko Haram as a terrorist organization. But last week both the White House and the State Department said that hostage negotiators would be part of the team of experts dispatched to Nigeria to help in the schoolgirls鈥 rescue.
At the State Department Monday, spokeswoman Jen Psaki suggested the US would defer to Nigeria in the handling of the schoolgirls' abduction. But she also noted US opposition to any actions rewarding kidnappers for their actions.
"Nigeria is in the lead. We are simply supporting their efforts," Ms. Psaki said, before adding that "as you know" US policy is "to deny kidnappers the benefits of their criminal acts, including ransoms or concessions."
A factor that can cause countries that officially reject negotiating with terrorists to turn around and do so is public pressure, experts say. That is especially true in democracies like Israel, they add, where domestic political pressure can鈥檛 be disregarded.
What makes a 鈥渘o negotiating with terrorists鈥 policy so problematic for most governments, White says, is that 鈥渋n order to mean it you have to have an accompanying policy that the hostages are expendable.鈥
The history of the schoolgirls鈥 abduction suggests to some regional experts that the Nigerian government might have intended to keep to a no-negotiating stance. The girls were abducted in a raid on a school in the country鈥檚 northeast corner on April 14, but the mass kidnapping only gained international notoriety this month after Shekau released a video threatening to sell the girls 鈥渋n the market.鈥
Nigerians, including families of the kidnapping victims, complained of indifference on the part of the government until the girls became an international cause.