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Thursday, March 28, 2024

Sultan, Islamic Leaders Hold National Day Of Prayer Over Boko Haram

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The leader of Nigeria’s Muslims on Friday announced plans to host a national day of prayer in the capital as part of an effort to overcome Boko Haram’s brutal Islamist insurgency.

JNI MEETING: From right: Sultan of Sokoto and President-General, Jama'atu Nasril Islam, Jni, Alhaji Sa'ad Abubakar III; Secretary-General, Jni, Dr. Khalid Abubakar and the Shehu of Borno, Alhaji Abubakar Garbai El-Kanemi, during the Jni Annual Central Council meeting, in Kaduna, yesterday. Photo: Olu Ajayi.

The Sultan of Sokoto, Muhammad Sa’ad Abubakar III, has invited Nigeria’s prominent Muslim leaders to the National Mosque in Abuja on Sunday.

The “National Muslims Prayers for Peace and Security in Nigeria” aims to help the country in “overcoming the current security challenges facing the country” a statement printed in several national newspapers said.

The call follows an open letter to the Sultan written by Shehu Sani, a prominent northern rights activist and author who has been part of several past efforts to end Boko Haram’s five-year deadly uprising through dialogue.

Sani said Nigeria’s top cleric needed to do more to help secure the release of more than 200 schoolgirls held hostage by Boko Haram, whose mass April 14 abduction from a school in Chibok in the northeast has drawn worldwide condemnation.

“Religious clerics particularly in the north should move beyond prayers and independently move further to reach out to the insurgents and amicably retrieve these girls via means that will guarantee their safe return,” Sani wrote this week.

“The Chibok girls have guns on their heads and chains on their hands and we have a dangling sword of posterity hanging over our heads,” he added.

The United Nations on Thursday imposed sanctions on Boko Haram, blacklisting it as an Al-Qaeda-linked terrorist organisation, following similar moves by Nigeria, the United States and Britain.

Boko Haram has made repeated threats against Nigeria’s ancient Islamic monarchies, including the Sultan of Sokoto, the Emir of Kano and the Shehu of Borno, who is based in the insurgent’s northeastern stronghold.

The entourages of the Kano and Borno clerics have both been hit by deadly Islamist attacks.

Boko Haram accuses these leaders of betraying Islam by submitting to the authority of Nigeria’s secular government.

Some analysts as a result doubt how effective these Islamic monarchs can be in helping stem the violence which has already killed more than 2,000 people this year.

Abubakar has called on all of Nigeria’s Muslim governors, as well as Vice-President Namadi Sambo, clerics and traditional rulers to attend Sunday’s event.

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