Tag: ‘bring back our girls’

  • Family of rescued Chibok girl lauds army

    Family of rescued Chibok girl lauds army

    Mr Ayuba Aloson, a relative to one of the abducted Chibok girls on Friday lauded the Nigerian Army’s effort over the rescue of Salomi Pogu, the 15th in the list of the abducted girls.

    Reports say that troops of Operation Lafiya Dole on Thursday rescued Pogu in company of one other girl, Jamila Adams, at Pulka in Gwoza Local Government Area of Borno.

    The 219 girls were abducted by Boko Haram insurgents at Government Secondary School, Chibok in 2014.

    Aloson, who is among thousands of displaced persons taking shelter in Maiduguri host community, commended the military over their commitment to rescue the abducted girls.

    He expressed joy over the development, and hoped that the remaining abducted girls would soon be rescued from captivity.

    Alonson said that he is a family member of the rescued girl, adding that four of his nieces abducted in the school were still held by the insurgents.

    Read also: Troops rescue Chibok girl Solomi Pogu

    “I am happy over the development; our abducted daughters are still with their captors.

    “This demonstrates the commitments of the military to the rescue of the girls,” he said.

    Meanwhile, the Bring Back Our Girls movement had also lauded the efforts of the military in the rescue of Pogu.

    The spokesman of the group, Sesugh Akume, said in a statement issued in Maiduguri that the rescued girl was serial number 15, in the list of abducted 219 school girls.

    “Our movement is delighted to confirm this news to be true.

    “Salomi Pogu; is a daughter of Malam Pogu Yahi from Kaumutahyahi, a village in Kuburmbula ward of Chibok Local Government Area. Her parents are currently at an Internally Displaced Persons ( IDPs ) camp in Rumirgo village, near Askira-Uba in Borno.

    “She is number 15 on the list of missing Chibok girls. This brings the number of our missing girls to 112”.

    Akume said that the group was yet to ascertain further details on Jamila Adams and her baby.

    Pogu’s rescue brought the number of girls that were freed from insurgents’ captivity to 107.

    NAN

  • 24 hours over Sambisa forest

    24 hours over Sambisa forest

    At the instance of the Federal Government, the Bring Back our Girls (BBOG) campaigners were flown to  Sambisa Forest by the Nigerian Air Force (NAF) for an assessment of the military’s efforts to locate the abducted Chibok schoolgirls and others. The BBOG came back with a different perception  of  troops and respect for the military. Assistant Editor Seun Akioye was part of the guided tour.

    Former Education Minister and Bring Back Our Girls (BBOG) convener Dr Oby Ezekwesili and four other BBOG leaders arrived at the Nigerian Air Force (NAF) 103 Strike Force Group in Yola like celebrities. They arrived in the company of Information, Culture and Tourism Minister, Lai Mohammed. Top NAF commanders, pilots, technicians and soldiers were at the facility to receive them.

    After the exchange of pleasantries, the former minister walked briskly towards the briefing room where the BBOG interacted with military chiefs.

     

    The first flight over Sambisa

    The briefing hall was packed with the dignitaries and soldiers, many of them directly involved in the fight against Boko Haram. In reenacting a war situation, the NAF followed every sequence of a mission briefing, including talks on the weather, the number of platforms that are available and serviceable, the nearest airports and platforms that could be called for rescue in case of an accident, rules about exiting the facility in case of fire, fire prevention equipment and where they could be found, medical information etc.

    The Air Officer Commanding, Tactical Air Command, Air Vice Marshal (AVM) Nurudeen Balogun, who addressed the audience, is a tall and imposing man, conspicuous in any gathering. After giving a background on the Air Component of the war against insurgency, AVM Balogun gave a detailed background on the ‘point of interest’ – the Sambisa Forest.

    “Our main observation today is Sambisa Forest and it is 60,000 square kilometres or 18 times the size of Lagos. So, we are talking about a vast area,” Balogun said. There were some slight movements from the BBOG group as if trying to adjust to this new piece of information.

    He explained that the Intelligence Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) mission of the NAF is to gather data and intelligence from the Theater of War, analyse information and transmit to the ground troops as a guide. The ISR can reveal the movement and location of enemy troops, the strength and what ammunitions are available. The ISR can also direct the ground troops to the likely strategy of enemy troops, this is done to prevent and minimise casualty among troops.

    After the fall of Camp Zairo, dubbed as the spiritual headquarters of Boko Haram, Balogun said the NAF had conducted several ISR missions in the Sambisa General Area and had made recent sightings of people in the region.

    Villages where human activities were recorded, include: Njimia, Dure, Tumbun Rego, Dogon Chuku, Arege and Camp Zairo itself. On January 12, 2017, a video showed a Boko Haram Terrorist (BHT) movement in Kangarawa on the way to attack a contingent of ground troops but were successfully repelled.

    On January 7, an ISR mission noted that some women and children were seen fleeing close to Dure village and again on January 8, a group of women, many of them in Hijab, and children were seen in Njimia, after analysing the data, a decision was taken to evacuate the fleeing women.

    “What do you mean by to evacuate,” Mrs Ezekwesili asked impatiently. If the NAF commanders were angry, they did not show it, instead, Balogun pleaded for patience as he explained the process of evacuation.

    A Mi-17 helicopter was deployed to evacuate the women and children in Dure, eight women and 11 children were evacuated and taken to Maiduguri where they were treated at the NAF hospital before handing them over to the government. A picture of the evacuation was shown on the slide and a sigh was let out among the civilians, the women looked emaciated and the scruffy children had sores on different parts of the body.

    The evacuation mission was not without its dangers. The AVM stood up to explain that the women might not have been ‘real women’ after all but Boko Haram fighters in disguise. “The fact that they are on Hijab does not mean they are women when you come close, you may discover they are actually men in disguise and they will open fire,” he said.

    AVM Balogun also explained that getting the Chibok schoolgirls and other abductees remained close to his heart and the NAF.

    His words: “Getting the girls is very close to our heart in the Air Force but we are careful not to bomb innocent people. We are fighting Boko Haram because they are killing innocent people. If we do the same, we are not different. We have many occasions where pilots came back with their bombs because they saw women and children.

    “We are doing everything we can to locate the girls. We conduct ISR both day and night. Some of the pilots do not return to base until 4:00am, looking for the girls and other abductees. I am glad you are here and you will see for yourself some of the things we have been doing,” he said.

    Understanding the capture of Camp Zairo

    The BBOG team had so many questions after the briefing. Aisha Yesufu, co-convener of the group, was more combative. She wanted to know more about the sightings of the abductees; showed concerns about calling some of the women terrorists. She wanted them to be seen as victims.

    But the Information Commissioner in Adamawa State, Ahmad Sajoh, would have none of that.  “These Boko Haram militants don’t think like us. They do not behave like normal people and so, you cannot deal with them with the same level of reasoning as you. In Magadali, some women were taken into the IDP camp but unknown to us, they had bombs strapped on them. These women carried their children and with the bomb detonated in an IDP camp, what kind of mother would kill her own child with a bomb,” he asked.

    When Mrs. Ezekwesili spoke, she sounded to be having some trouble processing some of the information that have been given. She wanted to know why the NAF was still fighting when the Sambisa Forest had been captured; how accurate is the coordination between the Army and the NAF and what would be the endgame of the whole operation.

    The Minister of Defence, Mansur Dan-Ali, responded. He said: “Boko Haram is not an organised force. As you have been told, Sambisa forest is a vast area and Camp Zairo is the spiritual headquarters of the group. The capture of the camp does not mean all of the fighters would disappear but it is significant because it was once said to be impregnable.

    “It is not the end of the war, but it is the end of the mission to capture the headquarters of Boko Haram. The end of a particular mission in a war is not the end of that war. There are still some of the fighters scattered around and that is why we are still mopping up the remnants,” he said.

    The team then moved to the flight line, two aircraft, King Air 350 Diamond Beechcraft waited for airlift. Young pilots stoop over a large map showing the sprawling Sambisa Forest. A young pilot explained the mission and locations the team will fly over.

    Ezekwesili wanted to be shown Chibok town and Sambisa Forest on the map. She knelt down with the pilots and began to trace the locations. “Look at the distance, how they managed to take them from here to there….”

    Several voices cut in, offering explanations that the girls were not transported at a go and they moved probably in the night. The entourage was then were ushered into the waiting aircraft for the two-hour sortie in search of the Chibok schoolgirls.

     The second flight over Sambia

    The second flight took place in the night around 2:00am but it involved only one Beechcraft surveillance plane. The BBOG group did not show any signs of weariness as they walked towards the tarmac, Ezekwesili emerged with her torchlight to show the way. Mohammed was still in the overall he wore in the morning and he also did not show any sign of fatigue. The flight lasted for more than two hours and the group went over several villages in the Sambisa General Area. When the crew returned in the wee hours, it was time to do a debriefing and it was Group Captain Olufemi Odeyinde’s turn to analyse the footage.

    After every ISR mission, the NAF technicians would take the footage and subject it to a thorough analysis. This, according to Odeyinka, was to determine the threat level captured and the appropriate response.

    In the two sorties over Sambisa, the team flew over Camp Zairo, Tokombere, Njimia and a certain location known as “Tree of Interest (TOI).”  According to Odeyinde, the TOI is a tree found in Sambisa Forest and some activities have been noted under its shade.

    “We have seen some activities around the tree but it has not called for an operation. Some of them were women and children. It has been under our radar for some time. We will keep monitoring it until we are sure of what it is,” he said.

    In the afternoon sortie, the team found two persons walking around the TOI but there were no activities at Camp Zairo.  “The whole place looked deserted and burnt,” he said. But Njimia was different. According to some of the pilots who have conducted several sorties over Sambisa, Njimia is a medium size community in the heart of Sambisa Forest. Not everybody in Njimia is a bad guy, that is why you have to be careful,” he said.

    During the sortie, about 14 women were seen moving around in Njimia which was relayed to the ground troops.

    The flight over Sambisa left the BBOG group with a new respect for the military and the efforts to find the abducted girls but not necessarily to change their model of protest for the rescue of the schoolgirls.

    “We embark on this journey on the invitation of the Federal Government to learn a few things. We have learnt that NAF is very much working to generate the information that supports Nigerian Army to ensure the security of the Theater of War. By joining NAF to do ISR day and night, we saw what it looks like to embark on a search for targets like the Chibok girls,” Mrs. Ezekwesili said.

    But she also reiterated that the experience only helped the group frame the question of their demand. “It helps to frame the question we have been asking. The information has enriched our demand. We leave here to say the Federal Government should be able to say what strategic decision should be taken. It becomes a strategic question and we will hold the government to a decision on what options work better for our girls and others, As citizen-activists, we shall remain the voice of the people and hold the government accountable to its promise to rescue the Chibok schoolgirls and others,” she added.

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  • Buhari’s daughter faults BBOG’s allegations

    Buhari’s daughter faults BBOG’s allegations

    ..Says she doesn’t need BBOG’s permission to support charitable causes

    The Africa Support and Empowerment Initiative (AFRISEI) has rejected allegations of franchise infringement by the Bring Back Our Girls group, led by former Education Minister, Dr. Oby Ezekwesili.

    According to a statement jointly signed by the President of the Non-Governmental Organization, Hajiya Hadiza Buhari Bello, a daughter of President Muhammadu Buhari and the secretary, Don Uche, she said that their organization is a responsible body that would never engage in illegal activities by stealing someone else’s franchise.

    She explained that contrary to Dr. Ezekwesili’s allegation, her organization did not need to lean on the BBOG to be of service to the Chibok Girls and therefore had no reason to steal anything from BBOG or use its name to achieve any advantage.

    The Africa Support and Empowerment Initiative, she said, have its own defined objectives and that it didn’t need to steal anybody’s ideas to operate in line with its own objectives.

    The statement also explained that their organization is duly registered with the Corporate Affairs Commission and issued certificate of incorporation on 14th July, 2016.

    While praising the activities of the BBOG to raise and sustain awareness about the plight of the kidnapped Chibok schoolgirls, the President’s daughter said that their organization had broader objectives beyond the Chibok girls.

    They said though the Chibok girls are within the priority of their organization, its commitments to humanitarian causes didn’t end with Chibok schoolgirls.

    “Given the size of the problem at hand, the more Organisations we have assisting Chibok and other devastated communities, the better for the country,” the statement said.

    Hadiza Buhari and Uche said that as a charitable organization, AFRISEI is committed to empowering the youth and the less privileged in the area of job creation and skill acquisition.

    “It is also committed to supporting the education of the less privileged students, giving material support to the downtrodden the internally displaced persons.”

    They also said AFRISEI is committed to educating the masses to discourage unhealthy practices such as child trafficking, child abuse, child labour and gender discrimination.

    The AFRISE President and secretary said there is no law that prevents their organization from assisting the Chibok schoolgirls, adding that, as a charity organization, they offer help to people in distress, including the Chibok girls and the Boko Haram victims.

  • BBOG plans protest March in Abuja

    BBOG plans protest March in Abuja

    Concerned by what they perceive as ‘benumbing apathy’ to the cause of rescuing Chibok girls, members of the “Bring Back Our Girls” advocacy movement are now planning a mega protest march in Abuja.

    According to leaders of the group, Mrs. Obi Ezekwesili, Hajia Aisha Yusuf and Dr. Emman Shehu, a peaceful protest march will take place on Tuesday.

    Chairman of Kibaku Area Development Association, a communal initiative founded by people from Chibok and surrounding areas in Borno state told The Nation that in addition to government’s apathy, many people from his area who are resident in Abuja now appear indifferent to the Chibok girls’ cause.

    Speaking with The Nation at the unity Fountain, Abuja where they organized a sit-out before Jumat prayers on Friday, Dr. Emman Shehu stated that although they had begun a ‘Fortnight of Strategic Engagements’ on August 22, next Tuesday’s rally is meant to boost their advocacy effort.

    On Friday evening, Shekh Abdulfatai Adeyemi  led BBOG members in Islamic prayers at the Unity Fountain while Mrs. Ezekwesili and Hajia Aisha Yusuf also urged members to attend Christian prayer meeting at the same venue on Sunday and mobilise for Tuesday’s protest march.

    “Islamic and Christian Prayers are part of the advocacy; it is an advocacy of prayer and faith that God called us for.

    “We are not among those that rely on our human capabilities alone; neither are we among those who think one should leave everything for God without making efforts,” Ezekwesili said.

    Also, Hajia Aisha Yusuf emphasized that in a season where individuals and government disappoint, the best thing to do is to renew efforts and prayers.

    “We are urging all to attend the Islamic and Christian prayers because we believe that prayers can set our nation on a good course, touch even the insurgency and ensure the release of our girls,” she added.

    As usual, policemen in three vans stayed within earshot of the BBOG campaigners at Unity Fountain, near Transcorp-Hilton hotel in Abuja on Friday.

  • Tiwa Savage restates ‘Bring back our girls’call

    Tiwa Savage restates ‘Bring back our girls’call

    Nigerian hip-hop diva who was on Friday honoured with an award for her humanitarian gestures in assisting underprivileged African children in South Africa is canvassing for the return of the Chibok girls kidnapped by the dreaded Boko Haram group.

    Taking to her Instagram account on Sunday, the artiste who is currently promoting her RED album said people shouldn’t allow the devil scuttle efforts to achieve peace among mankind.

    ‘Let us not let the devil distract us by letting us fight amongst ourselves and lose focus on the many tragedies happening around the whole,’ she wrote, posting a mash of pictures of ‘Bring back our girls’ protest including a picture of American first lady, Michelle Obama.

    Continuing, she inferred that some people doubted her sincerity.

    ‘I didn’t just hashtag I joined several walks in protest, used my voice as an artist and wrote “olorun mi” as a tribute to lives lost on the Dana crash and will continue to do many more as it is my duty as a Nigerian, a citizen of this world and a child of the Most High.’

     

  • Bring Back Our Girls – UN speaks out

    Bring Back Our Girls – UN speaks out

    Two years ago 276 girls were abducted by Boko Haram militants from a school in Chibok, in Borno State, Nigeria. To date, only a handful of them have come back.

    I stand in outrage and solidarity with their families, demanding their return.

    These girls are not alone – thousands of others have been taken over the years before and after Chibok, subjected to unspeakable terror and brutality. They have been forced to marry Boko Haram fighters and live in sexual slavery. Many may have been trafficked across borders and sold. Horrifically, some have been turned into weapons against their own communities, sent back as suicide bombers to inflict maximum fear and casualties in markets and other public spaces.

    Many of those who have managed to escape have come back pregnant or with children. But instead of being welcomed, they and their children are often marginalised and ostracised, shunned by families and neighbours, viewed with suspicion and labeled as “Boko Haram wives and babies”.

    I urge the Nigerian authorities to redouble efforts to find and liberate the Chibok girls and so many others who have been abducted, and to provide health, psychological and trauma services for those who do manage to return. I also call on religious and traditional leaders to play a role to ensure that women and girls are treated with compassion and accepted back in their communities, and to shift the stigma of sexual violence from the victims to the perpetrators. We all have a sacred duty of care for these girls.

    Sexual violence is central to the ideology and strategy of terrorist groups like Boko Haram, who use it as an incentive for recruitment and fundraising among other core objectives. Therefore, we must also place the protection and empowerment of women and girls at the center of global, regional and national strategies to counter violent extremism.

  • Photos: 500 Days rally for Chibok girls in Abuja

    Photos: 500 Days rally for Chibok girls in Abuja

    Archbishop of Abuja Dioceses, Cardinal John Onaiyekan  (right), Coordinator #BringBackOurGirls, Oby Ezekwezili (middle)  and Chief Imam  of Apo Mosque , Mohammed Nur  while tying ribbons around a tree to  mark 500 Days of the abduction of the Chibok School Girls in Abuja. Photo by Abayomi Fayese
    Archbishop of Abuja Dioceses, Cardinal John Onaiyekan (right), Coordinator #BringBackOurGirls, Oby Ezekwezili (middle) and Chief Imam of Apo Mosque , Mohammed Nur while tying ribbons around a tree to mark 500 Days of the abduction of the Chibok School Girls in Abuja. Photo by Abayomi Fayese

     

    Archbishop of Abuja Dioceses , Cardinal John Onaiyekan  (middle),  Chief Imam  of Apo Mosque , Mohammed Nur  (right) with #BringBackOurGirls campaigners  during a walk to  mark 500 Days of the abduction of the Chibok School Girls in Abuja. Photo Abayomi Fayese
    Archbishop of Abuja Dioceses , Cardinal John Onaiyekan (middle), Chief Imam of Apo Mosque , Mohammed Nur (right) with #BringBackOurGirls campaigners during a walk to mark 500 Days of the abduction of the Chibok School Girls in Abuja. Photo Abayomi Fayese

     

    Archbishop of Abuja Dioceses , Cardinal John Onaiyekan  (left), Chief Imam  of Apo Mosque , Mohammed Nur  (middle) and Coordinator #BringBackOurGirls, Oby Ezekwezili during a walk to mark 500 Days of the abduction of the Chibok School Girls in Abuja. Photo by Abayomi Fayese
    Archbishop of Abuja Dioceses , Cardinal John Onaiyekan (left), Chief Imam of Apo Mosque , Mohammed Nur (middle) and Coordinator #BringBackOurGirls, Oby Ezekwezili during a walk to mark 500 Days of the abduction of the Chibok School Girls in Abuja. Photo by Abayomi Fayese
  • 500 Days: Campaigners hold rally for chibok girls

    500 Days: Campaigners hold rally for chibok girls


    Members of the 'Bring Back Our Girls' campaign on Thursday held a peaceful protest to mark the 500th days of the abduction of the over 200 school girls from Chibok community in Borno state by Boko Haram insurgents. The campaigners and well wishers across the country matched in large numbers with hope in the President Muhammadu Buhari led-administration of their rescue. It would be recalled that the schools girls were abducted in April 2014 when the Islamic fighters stormed the Government Secondary School in Chibok abducting 276 girls while preparing for exams. [news_box style="2" display="tag" link_target="_blank" tag="Chibok" count="8" show_more="on" show_more_type="link" header_background="#dd3333" header_text_color="#f2f2f2"]

  • Bring back our girls campaigners

    Kudos to the court verdict that legalizes their efforts and condemns the police

    The judgment of an Abuja High Court presided over by Justice Sunday Aladetoyimbo declaring the attempt by the Police to ban the #BringbackOurGirls campaigners from holding their rallies as illegal, unconstitutional, null and void is salutary. For us and we are sure for most Nigerians that attempt by the federal government to use the police to stop the patriotic efforts of the campaigners to keep in the front burner what ordinarily should be the prime interest of President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration is reckless. But for the misguided interest of the administration, a government that lacks the capacity to ensure the security of lives and property has no business being in power.

    As held by the court, the freedom of thought, expression, assembly and association are fundamental rights guaranteed to all Nigerians, in sections 38, 39 and 40 of the 1999 constitution, and the Police has not right to abridge them. These rights are also guaranteed under Articles 10 and 11 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights (Ratification and Enforcement) Act 2004. But despite these express provisions of the law, AIG Joseph Mbu, then Commissioner of Police, Abuja, now AIG Zone 7, reminiscent of his conduct as Commissioner of Police in Rivers, however declared the assembly of the campaigners unlawful and threatened to ban their peaceful gatherings. It was that brazen violation of the clear provisions of our constitution by AIG Mbu that led the protesters to approach the court for redress.

    As law abiding citizens the campaigners did the right thing to approach the court for enforcement of their fundamental rights, and it is gratifying that the Honourable High Court declared the action of the police authority and the federal government unlawful. Our hope is that Mr. Mbu and his co-respondents have learnt the limits of their powers in a democracy, unless of course they are outlaws. Notably in making the order, the court granted “an order of perpetual injunctions restraining the respondent, his agents and privies from further preventing the applicants or aggrieved Nigerians from taking part in protests and rallies in exercise of freedom of expression, assembly and association as guaranteed by the constitution and the African Charter.” Now that the Court has declared Mr. Mu’s gambit as an affront to the Constitution, we hope he can now be called to account.

    Unfortunately the heart rendering plight of the over 200 students of the Government Secondary School, Chibok, who were apprehended by the criminal elements, better known as Boko Haram since April 15, is yet to come to an end. Ordinarily their cause is such that should worry any sane soul, considering that their continuous detention by the insurgents has caused the deaths of many of their parents, and brought untold hardship to the others. As a nation the successful kidnap and marauding into slavery or forced marriages of the girls, as claimed by the insurgents, constitutes an unprecedented humiliation for our country.

    But to the surprise of many Nigerians, the federal government led by President Goodluck Jonathan, has shown the lack of capacity to bring that debacle to an end. Just recently, the government gleefully announced a ceasefire with the insurgents which they claimed would include the unconditional release of the Chibok girls in exchange for some of the Boko Haram criminals captured by the security agencies. Unfortunately that turned a hoax, and now the girls have spent over 200 days in captivity with no hope in sight. It is the self-sacrificing effort of the #BringBackOurGirls group to keep the plight of these girls in public consciousness that Joseph Mbu shamelessly tried to stop.

    As if to rub salt to the injury and further ridicule Nigeria, the leader of the deadly Islamic sect in contrast to the claim of Nigeria’s Chief of Defence staff, Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh, came out recently to ridicule the attempted effort by government to make peace with the group. Since that video came out, the Boko Haram appears to have taken an upper hand in the fight to colonize a large chunk of Nigerian territory. So it is now necessary for all well-meaning Nigerians to openly canvass for support for the #BringBackOurGirls campaigners as one major way to keep their plight in public view.

    After all the Jonathan administration has clearly set its eyes on getting re-elected at all cost, regardless of their performance in office. The side effect of such a major distraction from the primary purpose of a government is that fundamental issues such as the security of lives and property continues to be neglected at a great cost to the nation. But as has been demonstrated by President Jonathan’s government, no amount of complaint is enough to redirect their attention in the right direction.

  • Bring back our girls: 84 days after

    SIR: More than 80 days after close to 300 schoolgirls were kidnapped in Chibok by Boko Haram, and many weeks after the Nigerian army claimed it had located them, nothing concrete has been achieved and the missing girls remain in the bush, far away from their families.

    The girls were said to have been loaded into trucks by Boko Haram insurgents on April 14, as they slept in their school dormitories in Chibok, a rural area 130 kilometres from Maiduguri, the capital of Borno State. While 57 escaped, at least 219 others have only been seen in a video released by Abubakar Shekau, in which he threatened to sell the girls into slavery unless they are swapped with detained Boko Haram members.

    Even with international help from countries like United States, Britain and France, the Nigerian army has failed to either rescue the girls or strike a deal with the insurgents to release them.

    It is now obvious that no one knows where the girls are or what has been happening to them. No one can say authoritatively how many of them are still alive or even well.

    After initially claiming that it had rescued the girls, only to retract its statement following media backlash, the Nigerian army seems to be losing credibility in the rescue saga by the day.

    The Nigerian government also seems eager to turn the page and late last week, President Goodluck Jonathan embarked on what the Washington Post called “newspaper diplomacy” by writing an opinion article in The Washington Post. His claims that his heart aches over the missing Chibok girls could be taken with a pinch of salt.

    The ban on #BringBackOurGirls protests in Abuja some weeks ago, the seizures of many newspapers critical to the government and the rhetoric by the Nigerian army against the Nigerian press suggest President Jonathan and his administration simply want to turn the page and focus on the 2015 elections coming up next year.

    But newspaper diplomacy and intimidation cannot erase the fact that the girls are still missing 79 days after they were kidnapped. The administration would like Nigerians to forget about the missing girls and move on. But we will not. Over 35,000 security personnel were deployed for the Ekiti governorship election.  Why can’t there such massive deployment of troops to rescue the girls?

    We believe the best diplomacy the President can embark upon is to first find the girls, rescue them and reunite them with their families. Anything short of that is just balderdash.

    • Oni Oluwatobi David,