No words… the echo of a silence thus twirls. ‘Tis the vanishing future of Nigeria’s pearls. Does pain have a voice or a shape…, doth it curls? Our teardrops form an ocean of sorrowful swirls. As a people we demand that Sambisa unfurls. Oh give us our children, just bring back our girls! ******** “’Alas, verily,’ may the World stop and see, The tragedy, agony that has befallen on thee! As the narrator observing from a tree, I foresee: A people so shattered, sinking deep undersea. A nation, a giant forced down on its knee. A potpourri of millions; almost one seventy. For nearly three scores, thy homeland was free. Despite the debris, thy children could ‘be.’ Lest, an evil committee rose from within the country, Lead by a mad man on a murderous spree. With bombings, killings as the group’s solemn decree, They ventured into schools and with girls they did flee. The horror of such violation done so blazingly, Has shaken the World to an utmost degree. The blood that’s been shed, now almost daily, Has got to be stopped with every guarantee. Through protest and dialogue thy stand in esprit. Demand thy girls back home…, make thy desperate plea. It has split up thy struggle, now thy no longer agree, To focus on the insurgents, who are the real enemy!” ******** No words… the echo of a silence thus twirls. ‘Tis the vanishing future of Nigeria’s pearls. Does pain have a voice or a shape…, doth it curls? Our teardrops form an ocean of sorrowful swirls. As a people we demand that Sambisa unfurls. Oh give us our children, just bring back our girls! ******** “’By my troth,’ the trembling doom of a fate in despair, Has become our reality in this torrid affair. We were taken at night in a manner unfair, By the boogie-men we have all come to beware. We are the girls of Chibok, we cry out, we declare; Will none of you save us once more to breathe air? We just wanted to learn and have knowledge to share, ‘Tis why we went to school for exams to prepare. How could we have known, we were never aware Those men in those trucks were prepared to ensnare? Now, who knows where we are? We’re not here, we’re not there, We are million miles away from our parents who care. We have no more freedom under their constant glare, We have not much hope in this burden we bear. Has the world deserted us, thrown our lives in midair? Will nobody protect us from this ghastly nightmare? Will we ever recover, will we ever repair? …Not if we are left in this evil men’s lair! As day’s turns to months, our hopes do impair. Maybe one day we’ll be home… That’s our ultimate prayer!” ******** No words… the echo of a silence thus twirls. ‘Tis the vanishing future of Nigeria’s pearls. Does pain have a voice or a shape…, doth it curls? Our teardrops form an ocean of sorrowful swirls. As a people we demand that Sambisa unfurls. Oh give us our children, just bring back our girls! ******** “’Declare, O ye’ Mutants existing in Nigeria’s domain, Renounce Western Education or your kids will be slain! Since our name you profane and reject our campaign, We declare a ‘Fatwa’ in which violence will reign. Your sons, we will maim if they discard our strain. As for your teachers, we slice their jugular vein. Your pastors we will torture in a form inhumane. Your precious civilian JTF? Their blood we will drain. Muslims who abstain from our chain will feel the pain. The soldiers and police; we will behead outright, plain! Informants and snitches; we will kill again and again. In all of your villages, we will unleash acidic rain. Now, we’ve entered your schools and your girls we detain. We will marry and sell some, the rest with us they remain. We will train and convert them and wash out their brain. By the time we aredone, freedom they will never regain. With Al-Qaeda we train, surplus funds we obtain, And we’ve mastered the skill of ‘guerillalegerdemain.’ Before we weren’t this ruthless, in peace we maintain, It’s just now that our leader, Shekau…, is insane!” ******** No words… the echo of a silence thus twirls. ‘Tis the vanishing future of Nigeria’s pearls. Does pain have a voice or a shape…, doth it curls? Our teardrops form an ocean of sorrowful swirls. As a people we demand that Sambisa unfurls. Oh give us our children, just bring back our girls! ******** “’What art thou’am I seeing…? I don’t understand! Were children taken right out of our hand? The news spoke of girls and exams that were planned. Kids were apparently abducted by that lunatic band. The whole nation was shocked, the transgression was grand, So we looked to the government to, at last, take a stand. But the reaction was bland, the response was offhand, So much so that the parents were forced to take command. For two weeks no results from our army unmanned, They weren’t prepared to venture in that no-mans-land. So out of frustration and anger we manned, Small groups of protesters to shout our demand. If our government won’t stand for the girls in this land, We will expose its inept and negligent brand. We will stand for our girls; we will offer our hand, We will ensure government pays for its stubborn withstand. So through protests and writings our voice did expand And with some viral tweeting, BBOG was fanned. Our target is to hold our government in remand, Because they have the duty to protect Nigeria’s gland!” ******** No words… the echo of a silence thus twirls. ‘Tis the vanishing future of Nigeria’s pearls. Does pain have a voice or a shape…, doth it curls? Our teardrops form an ocean of sorrowful swirls. As a people we demand that Sambisa unfurls. Oh give us our children, just bring back our girls! ******** “’Do as thou wilt,’ but it is sad that you blame us straight For what these goons are doing to our mortality rate! As an administration that rules over a country so great, Do you think that we don’t care for each person, each fate? You don’t hold the monopoly to mourn as you often inflate, Everyone feels the pain of our girl’s incarcerate. All officials in government are parents, who can relate To the agony felt in Chibok in this awful desecrate. Yes it’s true we were late to give an update, But the accusations you’re slinging are pure out of hate. There’s no doubt many of you where you conjugate Have sincerity of purpose in your form and irate. But few of you standing have an ulterior trait, Where you politicize each issue as you dictate your debate! If you weren’t being insincere, why not offer your weight, Support our troops to deflate the terrorist estate? Our commitment is to this nation; it predates the negate Of insurgents and protesters who thrive on misstate. We will bring back the girls and strive to re-instate The honor and valor of our Nigerian State!” ******** No words… the echo of a silence thus twirls. ‘Tis the vanishing future of Nigeria’s pearls. Does pain have a voice or a shape…, doth it curls? Our teardrops form an ocean of sorrowful swirls. As a people we demand that Sambisa unfurls. Oh give us our children, just bring back our girls! ********
Tag: BringBackOurGirls
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A hashtag headache
Imagine if there were no #BringBackOurGirls campaigners, Nigeria and its government would have long abandoned the over 200 innocent girls still in the hands of Boko Haram terrorists. This plucky band of Nigerians are a positive sign that there are still people in these parts driven by higher ideals. The y may not be popular with government for keeping the issue on the front burner, but I nominate them for a national award for their patriotism and humanity.
For the Jonathan administration and security agencies they are a headache. But any attempt to cure this ‘irritation’ using blackmail and trumped-up charges will fail because the world is watching. The only thing that will excise the headache is the safe return of the Chibok girls. The campaigners deserve our support in the face of bare-faced intimidation by the authorities.
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#BringBackOurGirls US Coalition Position Statement
We demand action not mere talk: end the killings, stop Boko Haram, rescue our girls
The Nigerian diaspora in the United States is distressed by the mess that our homeland has become in the last few years. We are profoundly troubled that more than two months after nearly three hundred high school girls were kidnapped in Chibok, Borno State, the government has demonstrated nothing but gross incompetence, poor military strategy and utter disregard for the families of the girls. They have carried on as if the lives of these young Nigerians do not matter.
What is the life of a Nigerian worth? What does government exist for, if not primarily for the welfare and protection of the lives of its citizens? 3.3 million Nigerians have become internally displaced as a result of the Boko Haram insurgence in the last five years making the refugee situation in the country worse than those of Iraq and Afghanistan combined.
As members of the Nigerian diaspora in the United States, we are disturbed and angry about these conditions in our homeland. Nigeria is now a killing field where scores of innocent citizens are murdered everyday. An Abuja-based journalist, recently told a US news network, “All you need to ask is how many [people] were killed today and not was there an attack because there [is] always… one.”
We are distressed that efforts by the Nigerian government to rescue the girls have been cosmetic at best. The ruling party has invested more quality time in strategizing over elections than in solving the acute crises of insecurity in the country. Rather than taking real and meaningful action the government has attacked citizens exercising their human rights by protesting about the poor security situation in Nigeria.
In light of all of this, we, a coalition of Nigerians living in the United States hereby make the following demands:
We demand that the Nigerian government be more transparent about the search and rescue efforts, to date and moving forward, for the Chibok girls.
We demand that certain politicians from the region where the Chibok community is, who have confessed knowing the movements of these girls and ‘powerful’ Nigerians alleged to be working with Boko Haram be thoroughly questioned.
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Secret service on BringBackOurGirls ‘franchise’
Going by the reaction of the Department of State Services (DSS) to the BringBackOurGirls protests in Abuja, it is clear that the federal government continues to loath the gathering, perhaps because officials see it as an embarrassment to the government and a reminder of its impotence in the face of the abduction of 219 Chibok schoolgirls that has lasted for about three months. Addressing a press conference in Abuja last week, the DSS spokesperson, Marilyn Ogar, told a disbelieving country that the protests had become a franchise organised in a way that its aims and objectives could no longer be described as altruistic.
According to Ms Ogar, “BringBackOurGirls movement has become a franchise and security forces know what they are up to. If it is an ordinary movement seeking to pile pressure on government or security agencies to free these girls, there will be no need for the group to begin to have tags and insist that you must be registered. Security forces also know that they have bank accounts. We also know that they want to simulate a protest march inside Asokoro Extension in Abuja and claim that they were doing so inside Sambisa Forest, to be reported in some foreign media. We also know that they brought in some experts from outside the country to teach them how to beat security when they are demonstrating; to withstand police teargas and security operations. We are waiting to see when these things would work…”
If the secret service knows all these things about the protests and their organisers, it is surprising that it has not made any arrest. The accusations against the protest organisers are so weighty that the DSS seems to be saying they had become subversives. It will be recalled that in May, the Federal Capital City (FCT) police commissioner, the controversial Mbu Jospeh Mbu, had attempted to ban the protests by also suggesting its organisers had become anarchists and subversives. Higher police authorities had to wade in to countermand the ban and save the country a huge embarrassment at a time the whole world was still demonstrating in solidarity with Nigeria over the abductions.
Mr Mbu’s embarrassing order itself came after presidency officials and the first lady tried unsuccessfully to persuade the country to doubt the abduction story, suggesting carelessly that the story was cooked up to dishonour the presidency and undermine it. In spite of reports from security agencies in Borno State where the abductions took place confirming the crime against the schoolgirls, the federal government had to set up another panel to confirm the abduction and the circumstances that surrounded it. Useful time was lost in rescuing the girls.
Apart from the troubling fact that the Jonathan presidency is run along amateurish lines, as the world attests without equivocation, the DSS now gives the unsettling impression it has little respect for the constitution and seems unmindful of the fact that its actions and words indicate the secret service is more pro-Jonathan and pro-PDP than it is pro-Nigeria and pro-constitution. After many years of gaining respect for its professionalism and impartiality, the Nigerian Army is also unfortunately suffering from the same malaise of seeing itself as an instrument in the hands of Dr Jonathan and the PDP.
The present attitude of the DSS and the army suggests something even more sinister – that increasingly the leadership of both security organisations lack the character necessary to stand up to the president and resist all subterranean efforts to undermine the constitution and the law. Indeed, the army keeps reaffirming its support for and defence of democracy. But its actions demonstrate otherwise. It lends itself to brazenly partisan tasks in its eagerness to stifle the opposition, muzzle the press and carry itself generally above the law. The credibility of the DSS and the army will continue to be eroded if their commanders fail to embark on the deep soul-searching they need to unite their men behind the law and the constitution and retain the respect and admiration of the country. If they fail, the fault will lie squarely on their drooping shoulders.
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Photo: #bringbackourgirls – Day 80
Former Minister of Education, Oby Ezekwesili (2nd left), Wife of Former Chief Justice of Nigeria, Mariyam Uwais and others during a press briefing on the 80 days of abduction of Chibok Girls in Abuja on Wednesday. Former Minister of Education, Oby Ezekwesili (2nd left), Wife of Former Chief Justice of Nigeria, Mariyam Uwais and others during a press briefing on the 80 days of abduction of Chibok Girls in Abuja on Wednesday. -
#BringBackOurGirls campaign hits AAUA
Students of the Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba-Akoko (AAUA) have joined the nationwide campaign to make the government double its efforts in rescuing the abducted schoolgirls in Chibok, Borno State by Boko Haram insurgents.
The students held a rally on the campus, carrying placards to support the campaign.
Presidents of the faculty of Education, Social and Management Sciences, Smith Ikumapayi and Gbenga Olawale, led the protest.
One of the protesters, Alex Akinnibosun, a 400-Level student of Economics, said: “It is a proper thing for us to do to show the world that AAUA is also concerned about the abduction of the girls.”
Oladimeji Ayodele, a 400-Level History and International Relations student, said: “We are simply lending our voices to the global rescue efforts to free the abducted girls.”
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#BringBackOurGirls campaign, evolution of Hashtag activism
Hashtag online activism has continued to prove critics wrong in the amazingly unique way it amplifies disconsolate unheard minority voices, suppressed or subdued by a repressive and despotic government.
It draws attention of millions to a horrific story. It gets better when world leaders and celebrities latch onto the hashtag as it nudges other countries to weigh in or even intervene in the crisis.
Granted, a lot of persons may not know the complexities of the political, economic or security problems associated with such hashtags, and don’t bother to know, but still join the sentimental global train to amplify such stories helping to raise awareness to tales of horror. It is sometimes regarded as a wave of superficial momentary sentimentality because it is not in any way a real engagement in any attempt to resolve a complex or violent threat. However, the voice of minorities is amplified by sharing their stories in a way even the most sophisticated and networked print or electronic media platform cannot achieve.
Like #OccupyNigeria protest of 2012, #BringBackOurGirls campaign is another case in point.
The #BringBackOurGirls hashtag went viral worldwide sparking global awareness to the almost 300 schoolgirls abducted in the predominantly Christian community of Chibok, a small village on the outskirts of Borno State. Celebrities and global politicians – among them, world leaders – have united behind a cause to bring succour and hope to the families of the abducted girls by the Islamic fundamentalists who started out as a small salafist sect in Borno but have over the years morphed into a monster threatening to take control of some North-East states of Nigeria.
Before now, many people outside the shores of Nigeria have never heard of Chibok or Borno State. The awareness the hashtag raised brought to public knowledge, the horrendous atrocities the religious zealots have inflicted on a nation now at the mercy of their mindless and wanton killings. While the #BringBackOurGirls movement has drawn attention to the plight of the Chibok families, we’re still faced with the stark reality of our girls still missing.
Like everyone else, I had hoped that the campaign will be a tipping point for Nigeria’s war on terror. But subsequent attacks by the Jihadists in different states that have claimed over 250 lives and many more injured, has deflated such hopes.
Critics of hashtag activism have drawn parallels between the#BringBackOurGirls movement and #Kony2012 campaign. Via a movie, Invincible Children, that went viral on the internet with over 8million views on YouTube within the first few hours of upload, global attention in 2012 was attracted to a Ugandan warlord, Joseph Kony, and his Lord’s Revolution Army (LRA), where children were made soldiers and used to perpetuate some of the most brutal crimes against humanity.
Kony had been terrorising Uganda and Ugandans for decades but America and the rest of the world only got a glimpse of it when it became a convenient and popular hashtag. #Kony2012 trended for days and weeks on social media platforms turning the LRA Ugandan warlord into the most hated, loathed and wanted man. Despite the awareness that compelled the US to send some 100 troops to Uganda to co-ordinate the search for Kony, the campaign soon lost momentum and two years on, Joseph Kony remains at large!
Not so impressed observers have described hashtag online activism as “a frictionless convenience, conducted from the safety of a computer screen or handheld device that often serves more as a flattering public symbol of concern than concern itself.” Complex and multidimensional nature of problems are otherwise meant to look too simplified by mere tweeting, filming, and changing picture profiles across platforms. They posit that beyond the awareness raised, hashtag activism does not solve the problem. Some others call it an exercise in “self-esteem”. True, the reaction of the outside world is mostly sentimental as it essentially revels in the moment but in the case of the Chibok girls, it has drawn global attention to their plight, ratcheting up the pressure that has led to some sort of international military intervention or assistance. But a hashtag campaign at the very least can’t hurt even if those involved in it know next to nothing more than the hashtag.
Granted that hashtag activism oversimplifies the complexities of events abroad, and even if well-intentioned, rarely affect things on the ground but same cannot be said of the #BringBackOurGirls movement. Fillip and compass have been added to the rescue mission with the deployment of foreign intelligence personnel and some advance aerial surveillance gadgets by the US, Britain, China, Israel, France and a few other European countries joining the ongoing efforts to reunite the abducted schoolgirls with their loved ones.
Sustained daily protests in the Nation’s capital, Abuja, by the #BringBackOurGirls movement have put the government on its toes. Western countries are rushing Special Forces and all their first-world paraphernalia to Nigeria in the hope of tracking the missing girls down.
In spite of all the criticism against hashtag activism, the bring back our girls campaign has gone beyond borders, breaking barriers and doubts that the farthest hearts can be touched and leaders of world super powers can be forced to act.
President Jonathan, the man in the eye of the storm, only came alive when he learnt the online campaign has drawn the attention of Western powers. He did not flinch since the religious extremists kidnapped about 300 girls from Chibok. Nigerians didn’t expect him to lift a finger though, after all, nothing now moves him considering how he danced away in Kano 24 hours after 74 persons were killed by a bomb blast at Nyanya.
On this occasion, he began to act when the international community joined in the viral campaign. Wishing the uproar will go away quickly, same way his government moved on from the murdered school children of Federal Government College, Buni Yadi, who were killed by some unhinged monsters. John McCain, the straight from shoulder, critically outspoken Republican Senator, lampooned the Jonathan’s government slow response: “The United States didn’t have to wait until a practically non-existent government of Nigeria gave us (Americans, that is) the go-ahead before mounting a humanitarian effort to rescue those 276 abducted girls.”
Hillary Clinton threw all diplomacy and prevarication aside to submit that “the government in Nigeria has been somewhat derelict in its responsibility towards protecting boys and girls, men and women in northern Nigeria over the last years”.
But these campaigns and sustained protests have made us realise that people do actually care, even if they’re unwilling to hit the streets in protest. There is a new way injustice can be fought in the world where everyone gets involved in some way. It gives those who join the bandwagon a sense of belonging that they can play a small part of something immense to raise awareness about people around the world who are powerless, helpless and can do nothing about a dangerous, difficult, or otherwise unfortunate situation.
Ilevbare can be followed on twitter, @tilevbare.
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Chibok: Mother of abducted girl dies
Mary Paul Lalai, mother of one of the abducted teenagers of Chibok in Borno State has been confirmed dead.The confirmation was made by the member representing Chibok constituency in the State House of Assembly, Aimu Fona.He told The Nation that it was not the father of the two girls that died but one of his two wives, who on hearing the shocking news of the abduction of her daughter, collapsed and died of heart attack.The late Mary had since been buried according to Christian rites at the Mbulabam Village in Chibok Local Government Area of Borno State.Left to mourn is her husband who is still hoping for the release of two of his daughters held at the Sambisa bunkers of the Boko Haram.There had been speculations that the father of the teenagers had died from heart attack after two of his daughters from his two wives were kidnapped over a month ago. -

Photo: #Bringbackourgirls
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PHOTOS: Latest #bringbackourgirls protests
PROTEST OVER CHIBOK SCHOOL GIRLS IN JOS PROTEST OVER ABDUCTION OF CHIBOK SCHOOL GIRLS IN CHINA






