An aid worker who helps girls who have escaped imprisonment by Boko
Haram has been imprisoned without charge by Nigeria’s secret police.
The move has reignited claims that the country’s senior political
figures are giving clandestine support to the Islamist militants.
Mustapha Maidugu, a humanitarian worker who was gathering video
testimony of the girls’ ordeal inside a Boko Haram camp, has been held
in solitary confinement in the Nigerian capital, Abuja, for more than
two months.
It is believed he was arrested because of his ties
with Dr Stephen Davis, an Australian hostage negotiator and close friend
of the Archbishop of Canterbury, who has repeatedly accused powerful
Nigerian figures of bankrolling Boko Haram.
Davis, the former
canon emeritus at Coventry Cathedral, alleges that Ali Modu Sheriff, the
British-educated ex-governor of Borno state, uses Boko Haram as a proxy
to gain control over oil-rich land straddling the borders of northern
Nigeria, Chad and Cameroon.
Davis says the State Security Service
(SSS) is now “doing the bidding” of Sheriff. The ex-governor and the
SSS have reportedly denied the allegations.
Maidugu’s
incarceration comes amid a spate of attacks by female teenage suicide
bombers in northern Nigeria, which have killed more than 80 people in
recent weeks.
There are fears that at least some of these suicide
bombers had been kidnapped by Boko Haram and were either brainwashed or
blackmailed into committing the attacks.
Maidugu has lodged a formal legal appeal against his detention, according to court documents seen by The Sunday Times.
His lawyer, Baba Gana Shettima, says he is being held at the SSS’s headquarters.
Davis, who for the past eight years has helped the Nigerian government
negotiate with the terrorists, says Maidugu is one of four aid workers
he has worked with who have been arrested since he accused Sheriff of
sponsoring Boko Haram.
“The SSS has arrested people who have been
supporting girls who have been kidnapped, raped and abused but managed
to escape from Boko Haram camps,” said Davis. In 2004 the Australian
worked alongside Justin Welby, now the Archbishop of Canterbury, in
helping to resolve conflicts between oil companies and local militias in
the Niger Delta.
Davis said the security service was
“interrogating these young men in order to intimidate the general
population and ensure Sheriff is free to continue his sponsorship of
Boko Haram”.
Shettima said: “Any person who has had contact with Stephen is being arrested.”
Sheriff, who studied finance at the London School of Business, is said to own a fleet of private jets and luxury cars.
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