Tag: Chibok girls

  • Ezekwesili demands more from journalists in  Chibok girls’ affair

    Ezekwesili demands more from journalists in Chibok girls’ affair

    Former Minister of Education and leader of the ‘Bring back our girls’ group, Dr. Obiageli Ezekwesili, has appealed to the media to do more in the campaign to rescue the 219 girls abducted from the Government Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State, who are still missing.

    Mrs Ezekwesili, who led a 16-member delegation of the group to Vintage Press Ltd, Lagos, publishers of The Nation, said it was ironic that after 140 days the girls were discovered missing, “we are not any closer to rescuing them than we were on April 30 when we first came out to demand action on the matter.”

    She acknowledged the role of the media in creating awareness about the issue and thanked the management and workers of Vintage Press Ltd for supporting the campaign, by reminding the readers that there are indeed girls missing in Nigeria.

    But Dr. Ezekwesili said the time had come for the media to go beyond reporting the issue only when it is convenient, adding that they should take ownership of the campaign.

    She said the group had succeeded in creating awareness and compelling the government to acknowledge that the girls are indeed missing, but that there is an urgent need for action by the authorities to search for and rescue the girls, because so far, the impression being given by the government is that it has lost the initiative.

    The ex-Minister of Education said it was the responsibility of the media to keep government officials on their toes by remaining focused on the issue to engender public debate.

    She said every newspaper should have a terrorism desk because “the kind of thing happening now cannot be handled by a general desk.”

    Mrs. Ezekwesili noted that “there are many options open to the government. But as we speak, we don’t know the option the government is taking and time is running out.”

    She said the advocacy group is invariably being asked to provide the solution towards cracking the Chibok girls case.

    According to her, the buck stops at the table of government and that if Nigerians have to rely on a mere citizens advocacy group to solve the Chibok girls mystery, then there would be no need for government.

    The group said journalists have the privilege of meeting and “it is time you engaged them effectively” to get the girls back safely.

    It noted that since the ‘Bring back our girls’ campaign started, the number of attacks in the communities around Chibok had escalated.

    Dr. Ezekwesili said it is disheartening that despite the awareness created, the Federal Government has not deemed it necessary to take ownership of the crisis and safeguard the area, adding that “this is a cause for worry.”

    She said it was also disheartening that almost everyone had moved on, particularly with the outbreak of the Ebola epidemic.

    She said ironically, the international community believed that it is a Nigerian problem, which should be tackled by Nigerians.

    The leader of the “Bring back our girls” campaigners recalled that the Chibok girls were abducted about midnight on April 14, and that there was a bomb blast on the same day in Abuja.

    She recalled how she got involved in the matter. “I had been particularly distressed by the series of bomb blasts in Abuja, not because it was happening in the capital, but because it seemed as if Nigerians had resigned everything to fate and were literarily waiting for the next bomb blast to happen.

    “As some of you, who are actively engaged in the social media would attest, I am very much into the social media. The reason being that I use that space to engage on the matter of public policy; one of the things I wanted to do on leaving the World Bank was to teach public policy — a couple of the universities wanted me to do that – but I could not do that because my assignments involved a lot of travels.

    “I found it bizarre that the bomb blasts kept going off, but after each one, Nigerians simply moved on.” Dr. Ezekwesili said citizens do have a voice and this ought to be ventilated when things are going wrong.

    “It was kind of strange. So, when the Abuja one of April 14 happened, it dawned on me that it is our responsibility as citizens to participate in the conversation of what is going on in the country. On my Twitter account, I tweeted and said, if you are a citizen and have an idea on how to end terrorism, can you tweet at me? And then, people began to tweet at me; it was almost as if they have been waiting for that kind of prompting. People began to tweet at me, and at the end of the day over 500 tweets had been sent my way, detailing their ideas to end terrorism.”

    She added that it was not until the next day, by 1pm, that she got the news through the social media that some hundred and something girls had been abducted in a city in Borno State.

    “Until the 17th, there was no news from anybody. It was in the evening of the 17th that the military responded that there had been an abduction of girls in Borno, but that they had rescued them. But two days after, it was recanted.”

    According to Mrs. Ezekwesili, it was actually on April 23, in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, at a UNESCO event inaugurating Port Harcourt as the World Book Capital that the ‘Bring back our girls campaign’ formally took shape.

    At the event, she resolved, with a couple of her associates, to seize the opportunity to ask the audience to stand up for a few minutes for the Chibok girls because for about 10 days then they had been missing and no word on them.

    “But, as it turned out, Prof. Wole Soyinka, who was part of the event, made the Chibok girls a sizeable part of his speech. That was how the process that culminated in the ‘Bring back our girls’ campaign started.”

    She said there is no iota of truth in the allegation that the campaign is politically-motivated.

  • Presbyterian Church hails govt’s response

    The Presbyterian Church of Nigeria has hailed the proactive response of the federal and state governments to the Ebola virus.

    But it said it wants measures to ensure that the disease is contained and eradicated.

    The church, in a communiqué at the end of its biennial General Assembly in Calabar, Cross River State, urged government to ensure that there was surveillance at the entry points into the country so that no new cases of the epidemic would be recorded.

    It called for the production and supply of experimental drugs for those infected.

    The communiqué, signed by the Prelate and Moderator of the General Assembly, Prof. Emele Mba Uka and the newly-elected Principal Clerk, Rev. Eseme David William, welcomed the Federal Government’s initiative to set up a special fund in aid of victims of the Boko Haram insurgency and other social upheavals.

    The church also set up a fund toward the rehabilitation of the Chibok girls,  saying this was in keeping with its spirit of Christian charity and in support of the President’s initiative.

    But it lamented the “seeming inability of the government to rescue the abducted girls and contain the Boko Haram insurgency.”

    On power supply, the church noted that despite government’s efforts at improving power supply by privatising the sector, power outages were still rampant in almost all parts of the country.

    It said: “It is embarrassing that consumers are paying heavily for the services not rendered. Government should put in place an effective mechanism to ensure creditable performance by the registered distribution companies. The Federal Government should set a timeline when Nigerians and corporate manufacturing consumers will get value for the privatisation of the energy sector.”

  • Ezekwesili: Chibok girls should be our primary priority

    Ezekwesili: Chibok girls should be our primary priority

    Protesters of the #BringBackOurGirls have said the rescue of the abducted Chibok schoolgirls should be the nation’s primary responsibility and not secondary.

    They urged the media not to allow the rescue become a secondary priority of the Federal Government and Nigerians.

    The protesters said this might lead to forgetting the girls.

    The group said 140 days after the abduction of the schoolgirls, it had moved beyond creating awareness to knowing if anything was being done.

    The former Education Minister and leader of the protesters Dr Oby Ezekwesilli said the group wished to capture the power of the press to sustain the need to rescue the girls.

    She noted that instead of the government criticising the advocacy and seeing the protesters as enemies, it should see them as an advantage to the growth of the country because citizens were uniting for the growth of the country and an end to terrorism.

    She said: “The media must advocate to avoid the girls becoming a secondary priority for the government or the society.

    “One hundred and forty days after the abduction of our daughters, we have moved beyond trying to create an awareness of their abduction to knowing if anything is being done. We wish to capture the power of the press to sustain the fight of the Chibok girls.

    “Right now, we have passed the point of the general briefs where the person briefing does not even understand the terminologies involved. The media need to be more sophisticated in their interactions with the government on the state of terrorism in the country.

  • Group to northern elders: Chibok girls won’t stop Jonathan

    A socio-political group, De Servants, on Wednesday dared northern elders insisting that President Goodluck Jonathan would declare for a reelection with or without the abducted Chibok girls.

    Northern Elders Forum (NEF) recently gave the President till October to either produce the girls or forget his re-election ambition.

    But De Servants carpeted NEF for the ultimatum after a meeting in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, attended by its members across the six geopolitical zones.

    The group asked NEF to help President Jonathan and the country to bring back the girls instead of apportioning blames.

    De Servants endorsed President Jonathan for second term and expressed optimism that the President would soon declare his 2015 ambition.

    The Leader of the group, Mr. Kime Engozu, said it was the responsibility of all Nigerians to fight insecurity in the country.

    He asked the northern elders to imitate the spirits of patriotism displayed by their Niger Delta counterparts when the region was ravaged by militancy.

    He recalled that the Niger Delta elders moved into the creeks to resolve the problem and restore the peace in the region.

    He said the group would invite the northern elders to work with the Federal Government for the release of the Chibok girls and restore peace in the country.

    “Let all of us work as nation builders and not nation destroyers,” Kime said.

    He said their endorsement of Jonathan for second term was to enable him to consolidate on his achievements so far.

     

  • UK to send warplanes to find Chibok girls

    UK to send warplanes to find Chibok girls

    British warplanes are to be sent to Nigeria to help locate the abducted Chibok girls, it emerged yesterday.

    The over 200 pupils of the Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State were abducted from their hostels on April 15.

    MailOnline reported yesterday that three Royal Air Force (RAF) Tornado GR4s outfitted with surveillance equipment were being deployed to fly reconnaissance missions over the Northeast.

    A government source told The Times that the fighter bombers would help the Nigerian authorities by tracking the movements of Boko Haram militants.

    According to the report, the mission is dependent on a nearby nation giving them permission to use a runway.

    A United Kingdom Ministry of Defence (MOD) spokesman did not deny the report about the deployment of the planes, adding: “The UK continues to work with the U.S., France, Nigeria, its neighbours and international partners to provide advice and assistance to the Nigerian Government.

    “Together with our allies, we have provided continuous surveillance support to the Nigerian authorities, including satellite imagery. We are still in discussion with partners on the deployment of further surveillance capability.’

    In Abuja, protesters of the BringBackOurGirls (BBOG) movement said yesterday that the government owes them an apology for initially denying the abduction of the Chibok girls.

    They said that when the news first broke that the girls had been abducted and they began protesting for their safe rescue, people in government accused them of lying and being sponsored by the opposition instead of squarely looking into the problem.

    BBOG said in another clime, those people would have come out and publicly apologised.

    A member of the group, Abubuakar Abdullahi, stated this yesterday in Abuja, at the sit-out of the group.

    “We deserve an apology, at least from the people who were within government or in office that came out, or people who stood up based on the office they occupy to say that the movement was based on lies, to say that the Chibok girls had not been kidnapped, to say that it was political and all.

    “I think after the committee went and did the research and found out that this was actually true and the girls had really been abducted, at least in a sane society, it would have been that we get an apology,” she said.

    The group promised that whatever the cause, they would stand firmly in their advocacy and insist that the government does its duty to the citizens of the country of which the Chibok girls are a part of and fight for their safe return to their families.

  • Methodists Church: Don’t sell your votes

    The Methodist Church Nigeria has advised to desist from selling their votes ahead of the 2005 general elections.

    Rather, it said Nigerians should vote with their conscience for candidates that offer the best possibility for improved living.

    The church also called on the National Assembly to accept credible proposals put forward by the ongoing confab.

    These were some of the resolutions contained in a communiqué issued at the end of the 44th\9th biennial conference of the church in Port-Harcourt, capital of Rivers State last week.

    The conference with the theme ‘Let my people move forward’ attracted delegates from across the federation.

    A communiqué signed by the Prelate of the church, His Eminence Dr Samuel Uche and Secretary of Conference, Rt. Rev. Raphael Opoko, said: “Electorates are charged to desist from selling their votes and to vote for credible candidates who will work for their interest on assumption of office.”

    On the abduction of over 200 Chibok girls, the church urged the federal government and the international community to expedite actions on their safe return.

    The church frowned against membership of secret societies and urged those involved to desist or face disciplinary actions.

    It also vowed to sanction any member involved in polygamy in accordance with the rules of the church.

    It was also resolved that the church should go into commercial agriculture “to support the efforts of the different tiers of government in provision of food security and employment for women and young Nigerians”.

    The conference also commended the establishment of  Wesley Microfinance Bank towards the empowerment of youths and the active poor, both within and outside the Church.

  • Chibok girls: Troops in Sambisa, says DHQ

    Chibok girls: Troops in Sambisa, says DHQ

    TROOPS are in Sambisa forest – the bulwark of the fundamentalist Boko Haram sect – in an effort to retrieve the abducted Chibok girls.

    The over 200 girls are believed to be in captivity in the forest. They were abducted from their hostel in Chibok, Borno State, on April 15.

    The government has been under pressure to bring them back.

    The Defence Headquarters (DHQ) said yesterday that troops were in Sambisa forest, which was, however, silent on the next line of action, even as it stressed that only the military has a “major plan” in the offing.

    It said that contrary to insinuations, Nigerian soldiers are trained for counter-terrorism.

    The Director of Defence Information, Maj.-Gen. Chris Olukolade stated this  at a session with editors and Defence correspondents, which was organised by INigerian Initiative, a non-governmental organisation active in the redefinition of Nigerians’ perception of their country.

    He said: “What makes it difficult to get to Sambisa forest? All of it is strategic, gentlemen. We are not even completely out of Sambisa forest as I am talking to you. We are in Sambisa forest and we are in places contiguous to it.

    “But we have a major plan in mind, which I should not be disclosing now. We are not weak; we have the capacity.”

    “Sambisa Forest is over 6,000 square kilometres. It is not true that the place was re-taken by Boko Haram. There is freedom of movement in Nigeria and so, people move about freely. Do you know that there are village settlements and communities in the Sambisa forest and that is another limitation to bombing?”

    Concerning foreign interventions to rescue the Chibok girls, Gen. Olukolade simply said: “On a diplomatic level, I will say all is well.”

    He said Boko Haram had been attacking some towns and villages because the sect was carrying out its “last battle” in desperation.

    He went on: “The truth about recent attacks by Boko Haram is that all the places that they thought were their bases have been taken over by the military and so out of desperation, they are scattering everywhere. What they are doing is like a last battle for them.

    “There had been occasions when the terrorists were reported to be using helicopters in their attacks whereas it was the Nigerian military helicopter that was flying to attack the rebels.

    “Nonetheless, we are still committed to securing the civilian population at whatever cost. We are still committed in ensuring that we degrade their ability to continue their activity and eventually eliminate them”,

    He said Boko Haram was joking by laying claim to any part of the country, adding that the military would soon sweep off the insurgents in any part of the country, including Gwoza.

    Gen. Olukolade said: “I will reaffirm what I said that no portion of this country is available for terrorists to occupy. If they appear to be doing so, it is just a joke. With respect to this location, everything is being done to ensure that everywhere in Nigeria is safe and secure. “

    “The goal of Nigerian military and security forces at the moment is to deny the terrorists the resources they need to continue to hold our citizens to ransom. We want to defeat them so decisively that every Nigerian can live in peace and be able to pursue his economic and social activities.

    “We want to counter terrorism to the point that their coordination and their ability, their future effort to destabilise and cause instability in our country will be negligible or non-existent. We also want to ensure that haven the military will continue to contribute to the development and progress of our country’s democratic state.”

    The DHQ spokesperson debunked the notion that Nigerian military was not trained to embark on counter-insurgency.

    He added: “I do not agree that we are not trained for this period. Even before the advent of terrorism, our training doctrine has factored in counter terrorism right from the beginning. It’s only that the intensity may differ but everybody has knowledge of counter terrorism operations. It’s just that it’s only now that we are practising it in reality.”

    On the alleged extra-judicial killings by troops, Gen. Olukolade explained that a probe panel had invited Amnesty International officials to substantiate their claim.

    He added: “The probe of the Amnesty International’s video clips is ongoing. The team that we mentioned is already going round, calling on people who can assist them. They have even invited officials of AI to help them verify what they presented.

    “I was with the team two days ago and I know that they are working frantically to produce their report and they are not leaving anything untouched.

    “We just hope that those who made the allegations will also have the level of respect for that body (investigation panel) to tell them what they know.

    He denied allegations of corruption and human rights abuses against the military.

    The general said: “Those series of allegations of corruption are unfounded; the series of allegations of cowardice are rather demoralising and other forms of insinuations in various forms only tend to give the impression the Nigerian armed forces is not capable of managing the situation.

    “Unfortunately, this has remained the source for the international community that held us in very high esteem to begin to have a rethink. But the Nigerian armed forces has not been sleeping; we have been available in putting our expertise at the service of other nations. We have more of this in which we can put into the disposal of our country at a time like this and all we would need are encouragement of our fellow countrymen and their understanding.

    “We can only assure them that we mean well. The officers that are put in charge of these men are trained to be leaders. We should let them do the job in times like this. The integrity of everybody is at stake, and the time has come when we should rather reduce the level of accusations that are meant to demoralise and discourage.”

    The DHQ spokesman also said the military has a lot of information on the Zaria incident in which three sons of a Shiite leader, Ibrahim El-Zakzaky, were killed.

    He said: “For the cleric, if you study our posture, we do not want to engage him. We have a lot of information as well but they must be verified. They are too sensitive for public attention at the moment.

    “This issue should not be handled carelessly and that informs all the restraint in responding to some of what is being said. But that is not to say the authorities are ignoring it. Not at all.”

    Earlier in her remarks, the National Coordinator of Inigerian Initiative, Ms Ada Stella Apiafi,   urged security agencies and the media to be partners in national development and be seen as working towards the same goal.

    She said: “We should be wary of individuals and groups that may have their own selfish agenda and want to scuttle our national development by devastating selfish interest.”

  • Chibok girls: Igbo youths knock North’s elders

    Chibok girls: Igbo youths knock North’s elders

    The Igbo Youth Movement (IYM) slammed yesterday the Northern Elders Forum (NEF) for giving President Goodluck Jonathan an October deadline to rescue the Chibok girls or forget his 2015 re-election bid.

    The group, in a statement by its President, Evang. Elliott Uko, said the northern elders, by that statement, were unwittingly campaigning for the President.

    It stressed: “Nigerians are amused to no end once again as a section of the northern elite, who despises President Jonathan, has embarked on a campaign for Jonathan albeit unwittingly.

    “The vituperations of the Northern Elders Forum and the North’s delegates to the National Conference to wit that Jonathan should not run for the February 2015 election is a déjà vu of the 2010/2011 northern faux pas.”

    IYM said the excessive display of paranoia by the NEF did not only suggest that the North had run out of ideas and arguments, but it also confirmed that the Boko Haram insurgency was political.

    It asked: “Are our northern brothers treading this familiar road because of their love for Nigeria? Or just a last ditch effort in the desperate battle for central power and insatiable hunger for eternal domination of the rest of Nigeria?”

    IYM noted: “This is déjà vu. The last time our northern brothers took this road four years ago, they only succeeded in frightening the rest of the country and forcing them to gather behind Jonathan. A mere repeat of the same road that didn’t pay any dividend.  They terrorised him endlessly, gave him seven days to resign, chose a consensus candidate and campaigned on religious and regional pedestal, all these failed. Then they promised to make the nation ungovernable. Jonathan is still ruling.

    “The strategy of threat of soaking dog and baboon in blood is not capable of snatching power from Jonathan, as only Nigerians will decide in 2015.

    “It’s amusing that those threatening to reject a new constitution cannot see that they will only make a bigger mistake than their great mistake at the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) convention in Jos 15 years ago.

    “Fifteen years ago, the same people fiercely resisting the  restructuring of Nigeria through a new constitution, stormed Jos to stop a former vice president and the only man who would have handed over power to the North after four years. Instead, they brought out from Yola prison their northern choice, who dealt them a blow the North is yet to recover from. Once again as the world watches, the North is about to seal its fate as it opposes the only open route to a peaceful, stable and functional Nigeria – new constitution adopted at a referendum.

    “Their parochial mind tells them that they will seize power and keep it forever, hence their preference for the unworkable status quo – mistake for which they can pay dearly, sooner than later.

    “It reminds us of the great northern mistake at the PDP convention in Jos 15 years ago. What a déjà vu.”

  • Chibok girls: Troops in Sambisa forest, says DHQ

    As part of the steps to rescue the abducted 219 Chibok girls, the Defence Headquarters has  confirmed that troops are already in Sambisa Forest where the girls are purportedly being held hostage.
    The DHQ was however silent on the next line of action claiming only that the military has a “major plan” in the offing.
    It said that contrary to insinuations, Nigerian soldiers are trained for counter-terrorism.
    The Director of Defence Information, Maj-Gen. Chris Olukolade made the disclosure at a session with Editors and Defence Correspondents, which was organized by Nigerian Initiative, a non-governmental organization active in the redefinition of Nigerians’ perception of their country.
    He said: “What makes it difficult to get to Sambisa Forest? All of it is strategic, gentlemen. We are not even completely out of Sambisa Forest as I am talking to you. We are in Sambisa Forest and we are in places contiguous to it.
    “But we have a major plan in mind which I should not be disclosing now. We are not weak, we have the capacity.”
    “Sambisa Forest is over 6,000 square kilometres. It is not true that the place was re-taken by Boko Haram. There is freedom of movement in Nigeria and so, people move about freely. Do you know that there are village settlements and communities in the Sambisa Forest and that is another limitation to bombing?”
    Concerning foreign interventions to rescue the Chibok girls, Olukolade simply said: “On a diplomatic level, I will say all is well.”
    He said Boko Haram had been attacking some towns and villages because the sect was carrying out its “last battle” in desperation.
    He said: “The truth about recent attacks by Boko Haram is that all the places that they thought were their bases have been taken over by the military and so out of desperation, they are scattering everywhere. What they are doing is like a last battle for them.
    “There had been occasions when the terrorists were reported to be using helicopters in their attacks whereas it was the Nigerian military helicopter that was flying to attack the rebels.
    “Nonetheless, we are still committed to securing the civilian population at whatever cost. We are still committed in ensuring that we degrade their ability to continue their activity and eventually eliminate them”,

  • Insurgency ‘ll end with Chibok girls’ rescue, say protesters

    Protesters of the #BringBackOurGirls movement have said the rescue of the Chibok girls will end insurgency in the country.

    They said if the military could rescue the girls, the camps and cells of the Boko Haram sect would crumble and end to their reign of terror.

    Members of the movement said they had always taken the advocacy of the Chibok girls as a means to end terrorism in Nigeria.

    The movement’s Coordinator Hadiza Usman said the group, which had been protesting the abduction of over 200 pupils of the Government Girls’ Secondary School in Chibok, Borno State, for four months, increased the advocacy to remind Nigerians of the girls and give out fliers and stickers to Abuja motorists on the abduction.

    The activist said when she started the advocacy, she never imagined that it was possible for the girls to still be in captivity after 120 days.

    Usman said: “We know that  for our military to rescue the  girls will mean that they are at the nucleus of the insurgents’ camp and will dismantle their cells.

    “We do not believe that the insurgents will be able to take over the minds of over 200 girls that easily to turn them into anything negetive. We believe that the rescue of the girls will mean the end of  insurgency, by attacking and breaking up their cells.

    “Today is the 120th day of the abduction. We increased our advocacy by coming out of the Unity Fountain to engage motorists driving by. We feel that Nigerians should not move on with their lives, but we should be mindful of the fact that people’s daughters have been in captivity for 120 days. This made us stand on the road to hand out fliers and car stickers.

    “We believe that everyone who  has a voice should lend the voice to the Chibok girls and insurgency by demanding that the government should do its social responsibility to the people.

    “We appreciate what our military is doing and we call on the government to provide them with the things they need to rescue our girls.

    “We are also calling on the government to embark on a decisive rescue operation. We have not seen any concrete indication that there is a rescue operation going on, especially with the fact the localities are being attacked continiously. So, that does not give us comfort that there is a rescue operation going on.”