Security agents were last night working frantically to track the
whereabouts of a son of the former Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice
Muhammadu Lawal Uwais who was said to have joined the deadly Islamic
State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS).
The 41-year old son of the former CJN left home about a month ago with his two wives and has not been seen since.
Justice Mohammed Uwais
Justice Mohammed Uwais
One
of the wives a school principal, and the other also a school
administrator both left with their husband without telling their
parents.
Vanguard gathered that one of the wives reportedly told
her parents she was going to Dubai for two weeks with her husband.
Neither the former CJN nor the parents of one of the wives has heard
from them since.
Contacted for his comments, the jurist told Vanguard he had no comments to make on the development.
In
a telephone conversation with Vanguard in Abuja, the respected jurist,
who was Nigeria’s Chief Justice between 1995 and 2006, neither confirmed
nor denied the report published by a United States online medium, The
Will, on March 4, 2015.
Reminded that the report had already gone
viral, Uwais, who also spearheaded Nigeria’s electoral reforms, said
that he had no comment on the matter.
“I don’t want to comment on hearsay,” the former CJN said.
The
San Francisco-based news medium had reported that the son of the
retired judge, whose name it did not disclose, had joined ISIS after
moving from Nigeria with his two wives and children in order to help
fight alongside ISIS, which presently controls large territories in
Iraq, Syria and Libya.
The medium said that the intelligence
report came from Saudi Arabia, one of the over 50 countries alongside
the United Nations that has designated ISIS as a terrorist organization.
If
proven to be true, this would be the second time a member of a Nigerian
elitist family would be linked to a foreign terrorist group.
The
first was the notorious underwear bomber, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, a
member of Al-Qaeda, who is presently serving a life sentence without
parole in the United States, who is the youngest son of Katsina-born
Alhaji Umaru Mutallab, a wealthy Nigerian banker and businessman, who
had also served as a federal minister in the 70s.
Sources said that Justice Uwais had been told about the development.
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