Tag: Hadiza Bala Usman

  • NPA chief sensitizes girls on maritime careers

    NPA chief sensitizes girls on maritime careers

    The Managing Director of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), Ms Hadiza Bala-Usman, on Tuesday advised school girls in Lagos State to explore careers in the maritime sector.

    Speaking at the flag-off of the nationwide Girls Go-to-Sea Campaign, Bala-Usman, told the pupils not to be perturbed by peer pressure and allow themselves to derail in their educational pursuits.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the event, organized by Platform Reporters Communications, was attended by many women in the maritime sector.

    The NPA chief executive advised the girls to look beyond cultural inhibitions and make good grades in their certificate examinations.

    “With good grades in your exams you will get placement in higher institutions and take up maritime-related courses, which will guarantee you promising career in the maritime industry.

    “The industry seems to be men-dominated at the moment but that does not foreclose you as a girl from making it to the apex of your career in the sector.’’

    According to her there are no known career designated for men while precluding women.

    She noted that in every career, there were challenges facing people in that profession, adding that it only demanded doggedness for anyone to succeed.

    “Therefore, I charge you all to be resolute in your career pursuits and sustain the tempo which many of us here have created for women in the industry as our successors in years to come,’’ she said.

    Speaking at the event, the Nigeria Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) Director-General, Dr Dakuku Peterside, said that females in the industry were enjoying the respect of operators in the industry.

    Peterside, who was represented at the event by an Assistant Director in the agency Mrs Mary Madu-Hamman, told the girls that there were numerous jobs for them in the sector.

    Peterside, who listed subjects that could propel one into maritime careers, also reeled out universities offering maritime courses in Nigeria, including the Nigerian Maritime Academy, Oron.

    “Get yourselves prepared early enough and get advice of career councilors from women practitioners in maritime and earn good living devoid of being dependent,’’ Peterside said.

    The girls, who were treated to a brain-teaser competition, were given exercise books by the organisers embodied with career tit-bits in the industry.

    Memunat Abdullahi of Akande Danhusi Memorial School, Ikoyi came first in the competition.

    Lunga Jennifer of Wahab Folawiwo Junior High School also in Ikoyi came second while Chinonso Ohale from Ilado Community Junior High School came third.

     

  • Foundation donates furniture to Katsina schools

    Bala Usman Foundation has donated 2,400 pieces of primary school furniture to two primary schools in Katsina State.

    The Foundation’s desk officer in Musawa, Alhaji Lawal Baro, said that the furniture was donated to Lawal Baro, Primary School Musawa and Matazu Model Primary School.

    Baro told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Musawa on Monday that the gesture was to encourage enrolment in schools.

    The official also said the foundation had offered free eye treatment to 1, 500 people and another 6,000 patients treated of various ailments under its community healthcare outreach programme.

    The News Agency of Nigeria [NAN] reports that the foundation is in memory of versatile historian late Dr Yusuf Bala-Usman of Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria.

    He said since the establishment of the foundation, it had supported communities in Musawa and Matazu Local Government Areas of the state through empowerment grants and tools.

    Baro commended the Managing Director, Nigeria Ports Authority, Hadiza Bala-Usman, who is also a Director of the foundation for her immeasurable support.

    Boro assured that the foundation would continue to render invaluable support to people of the area so as to keep the name of Bala Usman alive.

     

  • FG inaugurates governing board of NPA, NIMASA

    FG inaugurates governing board of NPA, NIMASA

    The Federal Government has inaugurated the governing board of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), and Nigerians Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA).

    The government during the inauguration charged members of the board to contribute meaningfully towards achieving the set mandate of both agencies.

    The NIMASA board has 11 members and has as its chairman, Maj. Gen. Jonathan India Garba, and S.U Galadanchi, Ms. Nene Betty Dike, Rear Admiral Adeniyi Osinowo, Dakuku Peterside, Bashir Yusuf Jamoh, Joseph Oluwarotimi Fashakin, Gambo Ahmed, Asekomhe Otaakhia Keneth, Mohammed Gidado Mu’azu and Barrister Ebele Obi  as members.

    The NPA governing board which comprises of eleven members will be chaired by Mr. Emmanuel Olajide Adesoye.

    Other members of the board are: Mrs. Uche Okoro, Hadiza Bala Usman, Mohammed Bello Koko, Dr. Sekonte Davis, Prof. Idris Abubakar, Supo Shasore, Sueliman Ibrahim Halilu, Constance Harry Marshal, Umar Shua’ibu and Charles Efe Emukowhate Sylvester.

    Charging the board member, the Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Amaechi in Abuja yesterday said: “The appointment was approved by  President Buhari and we believe that with this board, NIMASA can achieve its core mandate of promoting the development of indigenous commercial shipping capacity in international and coastal shipping trade and also regulate and promote maritime safety, security, marine pollution and maritime labour through fleet acquisition and expansion, manpower development,  interagency collaboration, maritime safety and security and ship registration amongst others.

    As for the NPA, Amaechi said: “the mandate of the NPA is to construct develop ports, docks, harbours, piers, wharves, canals, water courses, embankment, revetment and jetties.

    He also added that they can invest and deal with monies of the Authority not immediately required on such securities or in such investment and manner as may, from time to time be expedient and also appoint, license and manage pilots of vessels.
  • NPA’s N13.595b trapped in three banks, TSA account

    NPA’s N13.595b trapped in three banks, TSA account

    About N13.595b belonging to the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) is trapped in three commercial banks and the Treasury Single Account (TSA) in the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

    About $24.1million (N9.399billion at N390 to a dollar) of the sum was lodged with a bank.

    Nothing was said about it in the handover report given to the new Managing Director of NPA, Hadiza Bala Usman.

    The cash was allegedly hidden by some forces from the new management team.

    Another trapped sum of €6million (N2.09billion) is in two other banks.

    The last tranche of $5.4million (N2.106b) is in the NPA’s TSA Account in the CBN which some top officials of NPA feigned ignorance of.

    These discoveries were unearthed by Hadiza-led NPA as part of its ongoing reform of the organisation.

    The new team, which assumed duties on July 18, 2016, also discovered that NPA had been losing about $38million (N14.820billion).

    According to investigation, the NPA management has opened up discussions with the affected banks.

    A source familiar with the matter said: “We wrote a letter to one of the banks,  but the bank claimed that it might have been an inherited liability from a bank it bought over.

    “But the NPA showed sufficient proof that it has the $24.1million in the bank. It is surprising that you are running a bank and you don’t know that there is $24.1million hidden from the management.

    “The management also said the bank is going to sink if NPA is insisting on its demand for the $24.1million. We are not out to sink any bank but we want our funds back.

    “We have a case of €6million that has been swept into two of the banks. There is another $5.4million in NPA’s TSA Account in CBN which some people (officials) feigned knowledge of and not doing anything to access the funds.”

    It was gathered that the NPA management might review service and concession agreements with some firms because most of the pacts are skewed in favour of the firms.

    Another source said: “There is a company whose agreement with NPA expired since 2009 and the service of the firm was retained without any renewal. The worst aspect is that the company uses NPA staff and equipment.

    “We are losing over $38million to such weird agreements. We are now ready to plug loopholes and leakages.

    “We are here to review and reform the NPA to ensure that the government can no longer be shortchanged.”

    The source said the new management will “review its budget from the present rate of 45-55 per cent (capital expenditure to recurrent) to 70% to 30%.

    “The training budget in NPA is huge but they are only used for conferences because of perks.”

    Asked if the NPA management will retrench staff, the source said: “No, but those afraid of our reform have been dishing out blackmail to set the workers against us.”

  • Hadiza Bala Usman and the Nigerian mentality

    Hadiza Bala Usman and the Nigerian mentality

    When the news broke that Hadiza Bala Usman, the then chief of staff to Governor Nasir El-Rufai, was being considered by President Muhammadu Buhari to head the Nigerian Ports Authority(NPA) based on the recommendation of Rotimi Amaechi, the Minister of Transport, I was very happy and optimistic for three reasons. I felt Buhari has finally seen reason to do the needful by bringing more young people on board, that the Nigerian project under the change mantra was on course and most importantly, the country is moving away from ethnic politics.

    An Ikwerre man is now recommending a Hausa woman to the president for a very sensitive and tedious national assignment is gratifying. This is because the Buhari cabinet has been bogged down by criticism of having too many ‘’dead wood’’ in its fold. This according to critics is because some of the ministers are too old to cope with the demands of governance in a digital age. Secondly, some of them have been part of past governments that have taken the nation to its present state where Nigeria is still learning to crawl at 56.

    Few hours later, her appointment was confirmed by the Federal government. I am at a loss why some Nigerians have continued to criticize Usman’s appointment on the basis of where she comes from. It is gratifying that no-one to the best of my knowledge has talked about her capacity to do the job, which is a plus for her. If there are, her experience at Bureau for Public Enterprises (BPE), federal capital territory and lately as chief of staff in one of the three most difficult states to govern in Northern Nigeria is good enough. Borno, Kaduna and Kano are the most difficult states to govern in the North because there are so many interests groups that can hold government hostage. Anyone who has seen Nasir El-Rufai since he became governor should ask him why he suddenly started growing grey hair.

    This to me should be the focal point. Her appointment signifies a paradigm shift by government and a ray of hope for our generation that the much talked leaders of tomorrow slogan of many years is finally materializing. The NPA is also too strategic in these lean times to be left in the hands of some political god fathers who consider juicy appointments their birthright.

    I believe her critics are missing the point. The founding fathers of Nigeria have always stressed the need for us to emphasize issues that brings us together rather than those that divide us. The question is Should Hadiza Bala Usman reposition NPA in the next 24 months, up its revenue base just like Hammed Ali has done for the Nigerian Customs; will the money go to Northern Nigeria or federation account? It is an undisputed fact that our infrastructure have gone so bad that one will think there is no government in place to fix things. This is why many Nigerians have become their own government fixing their roads, drilling boreholes for their homes in the absence of public water supply, paying vigilante watch to guard their houses due to inefficiency of the Nigerian Police and relying on generators as an alternative to Disco’s ‘’festival of darkness’’.

    All these challenges underscore the fact that the system is not working due to weak institutions. I see a new NPA as a partial step towards ending budget deficit that has become Nigeria’s middle name in the last few years. I guess this is what the president had in mind when he accepted Amaechi’s recommendation. Then, why the issue of where she comes from? I believe many years of nepotism has so much blinded some us that we find it difficult to see the larger picture in any situation. Any attempt to talk about her state of origin amounts to throwing away the baby with the bath water. It is unprecedented for an average Nigerian to recommend someone outside his/her ethnic stock for sensitive political appointment.

    Rotimi Amaechi could have used his position by recommending someone from Rivers state and the candidate will still scale through. He chose merit over ethnic solidarity and political patronage.

    I have lived in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts on the East Coast of the United States for the past six years where I went to graduate school. I have never experienced power failure for a second, driven on a road ridden with potholes; neither has my tap run dry.

    The power in my house is supplied by a company popular on the East Coast called National Grid. I have never thought or heard someone raising the issue of where the Chief Executive of National Grid comes from. Or whether he is black, African American or Hispanic? This is because it is irrelevant as what matters is service delivery and people knowing that they have a government that is caring and responsible. What has made the United States great is the focus on what one is bringing to the table, rather than his color of skin or state of origin. Why can’t we begin to have a civilized conversation about how to move this country forward without bringing ethnicity or religion?

    Since my sojourn in the US, I have been to Nigeria over a dozen times especially in the last two years. One thing that makes me sick is the epileptic power supply as someone who has an aversion for generators. I also pity people who do business in Nigeria due to the high cost of powering generators and double taxation. Why then should we rubbish a bold attempt to move the nation away from its sordid past? There is the need for us to do away with this Nigerian mentality that makes us look at things as Igbo, Yoruba, Hausa or Idoma.

    This mentality has done so much damage to our psyche that Nigeria is today more divided than we were during the civil war. I have never been a fan of federal character or quota system. It is responsible for the rot in the civil service today that a barber or welder gets the job of a permanent secretary without having the requisite experience to do the job.

    I have never met Hadiza Bala Usman, but only read about her at the early stages of Bring Back Our Girls Group (BBOG) and her stint as Chief of Staff of ‘’Chief Feather Ruffler’ of Kaduna state, Nasir El-Rufai. I see her as someone with vision. Hence, I do not care where she comes from, knowing what transpired at the NPA during the Goodluck Jonathan years.

    All that I care about is the repositioning of this strategic parastatal for improved revenue generation as a place where every Nigerian will be proud of. On the other hand, I never met her late father, Bala Usman either, but was opportuned  to be at an event where he presented a paper at one of the Northern states some years back. I had to go to the mini secretariat of the event organizers within the same premises to ask for a copy of Usman’s paper.

    As I entered the room, a Yoruba woman who was manning the computer told another young man who was making photocopies in Yoruba, “Can you imagine this Baba from Ahmadu Bello University, came with his return ticket, when other resource persons were waiting on government to pay for their flights.

    He is just too principled and honest that he never wants to take anything that is not for him’’.  The young man beamed and said ‘’Olododo ni Baba yi’’. This means Dr Bala Usman is a man of integrity. I could see admiration and respect in the eyes of these two people while the conversation lasted. Inside me, I shared the same respect for Bala Usman’s conduct. It is a radical departure from the culture I know as a journalist where resource persons invited by governors bill upfront regardless of how important is the presentation to the people and wanting their host to pay for everything including the polishing of their shoes. The import of this flashback is that in Hadiza I see her late father or what some call a chip of the old block. I see determination, courage and a change agent. Thus, she should be given a chance to justify the confidence reposed in her by President Buhari.

    Hadiza should see the criticism trailing her appointment as a shot in the arm to prove her critics wrong, by surpassing everyone’s expectation at NPA. The organization as it is today is in dire need of reforms that  even an “F’’ candidate in school knows the NPA is sick, malnourished and infected with the disease of Nigerian mentality. Her appointment among the many qualified persons is a litmus test for our generation and a challenge to test whether the Nigerian youth are still  their own  worst enemy.

    Go, Hadiza, as the torchbearer of this generation and the daughter of a comrade who never had the word ‘’impossible’’ in his dictionary, change the face of Nigeria Ports Authority (NPA) just like your father brought Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences (FASS) at Ahmadu Bello University (ABU) from relative obscurity to a center of academic excellence of national and global significance. Yar Mallam, Allah ya yi miki kyakyawan jagora.

    Lawal, a Public Commentator writes from Boston, United States. He can be reached via rafla2002pl@yahoo.com

  • Hadiza Bala Usman: From BBOG to NPA

    Hadiza Bala Usman: From BBOG to NPA

    The predicate of the naysayers is this – that it is neither plausible nor possible to be a social activist and subsequently morph into a fit and proper person fit to serve one’s nation at the highest levels at a time our country cries out for obligated service. Arrant nonsense.

    In the alternative, the contention is that being of northern extraction, whatever other qualifications she might possess, she is a fifth columnist and unworthy beneficiary of her accident of birth. That is simplistic, superficial and supine.

    Would it be legitimate to conclude that if Madam Ezekwesili had been appointed to high office to the credit of the Buhari administration, her commendable advocacy for greater robustness in pursuit of the earliest possible return of “our girls” be counted as the premeditations of an agent? I would hope not.

    Ms Usman and others came together to establish the Bring Back our Girls (BBOG) campaign and movement. Those that have raised their voices against her appointment as the Managing Director of the Nigeria Ports Authority (NPA) appear to contend that Ms Usman participated in and promoted the BBOG, ab initio,with the calculation and premeditation of a latter-day Machiavelli. I am not surprised. The lenses that we deploy when we discern and dissect our political arena deny us the opportunity of perspectives beyond the confines of our primordial persona.

    A long standing member of the All Progressives Congress (APC) before the Chibok girls were abducted, and a proven technocrat who had served at the Bureau of Public Enterprises, at the Ministry of the Federal Capital Territory, and as Chief of Staff to the Governor of Kaduna State, Ms Usman has always been seized by a drive to make governance more efficacious. Neither is she a Johnny come lately to social activism, but rather the progeny of a father whose impassioned and forthright pursuit of Pan Africanism and social justice provided the moral underpinning for her public service.

    Rather than berate Ms Usman, we should celebrate her as a paradigm of what a woman (not to speak of a Moslem woman) can be and become in a Nigeria wedded to modernity. In any other society, one would locate and acknowledge the foundations of her social conscience and consciousness, in the academic and intellectual furnace in which her father harboured and nurtured his children.

    Her father, Yusufu Bala Usman, a “leading leftist intellectual” and lecturer in history at the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, brought up his children with an acute awareness of the imperative of social justice. They were taught that the glaring inequities in Nigerian society were an ogre to be slain rather than a burden to be borne. Enlightenment comes in all shapes and forms and it came to her with mother’s milk.

    The poisoned well of parochial perspective is the bane of our growth as a nation.  As Theresa May ponders her cabinet with the shortest of notice, she will draw upon persons who have journeyed with her.  This ought not to be contentious; it has more often been beneficial than not. Ms Usman ought to be judged on her competence, her experience and her passion.

    I am yet to come across her competence and suitability systematically challenged or called into question in an evidentiary manner. The objections raised are, in the main, divisive and diversionary. Those that know her speak of her as intelligent, incisive and capable of clarity in thinking and execution. These are the very qualities that a national commending height like the Nigeria Ports Authority cries out for.

    Her experience, at both and federal levels, in pivotal areas of government is well documented and,truth be told, it has been far too long since the NPA had at its helm opportunity and occasion to harness a combination of management experience and proven public duty as this one appointment promises.

    The evident passion of Ms Usman and others in bringing the BBOG into being, and sustaining it in the face of a cynical and deliberately inert government, is eloquent testimony to passion wedded to civic responsibility. Those qualities are so rarely deployed in advancement of the public good that we are inoculated against them, preferring to promote parochial agendas.

    Ms Usman is not of that breed of politician and public servant who sees the public service arena as a place for “playing politics”; rather she comes to public service and office as a calling and opportunity to effect change as part of an agenda for good government.

     The NPA is such a pivotal parastatal in the Federal Ministry of Transportation that its success or otherwise will be one of the bell weathers by which the Buhari administration will be rated. Ms Usman’s institutional experience and breadth of vision means that she comes to this critical area with an appreciation of how the organisation syncs with the broader and more long-term goals of government.

     Those goals and objectives are the metrics by which she and this government will be adjudged.

    •Remi Joseph, a lawyer, resides in Lagos

  • Hadiza Bala-Usman, a square peg in a round hole

    SIR: When Thisday newspaper reported that President Muhammadu Buhari was set to appoint HadizaBala Usman as Managing Director of Nigeria Port Authority (NPA), I dismissed it as one of those allegations aimed at denting the image of the President by southern newspapers.

    Not long after came the formal announcement of her appointment which effectively confirmed what Thisday newspaper alleged. I have never met Hadiza in person, but I have read about her since her days at the BPE as an aide to Nasir el-Rufai when he held sway as the DG of the  the Bureau of Public Enterprise.

    A cursory look at Hadiza’s CV shows that, she is 40 years old which is quite interesting and encouraging, with a Postgraduate Diploma. But all her life, she has never worked aside the one year she spent in her father’s think-tank – Centre for Democratic Development Research and Training (CEDDERT) in Zaria except as an aide to Mallam el-Rufai. From his days at the BPE, to FCTA, and to the Good Governance Group (3G) which he co-founded when he was being chased by Yar’Adua government and to the Kaduna State Government House where she was serving as his Chief of Staff before her appointment. If we are to be honest with ourselves, a person with that credential is not qualified to handle a delicate task of managing our ports. Being a personal aide is entirely different from heading a very strategic agency like the NPA.

    Some may try to justify this nonsense by citing the case of Osita Chidoka who was appointed Corps Marshall of the Federal Road Safety Corps without any experience aside being a Special Assistant to a minister and in the Presidency and other similar irrational appointments by the past government. My answer to them is simple: We are tired of the status-quo, that was why we demanded for change, and through shared effort, and the will of God we got it.

    President Buhari should be careful with the way he handles some of these issues. He should not approve all the junks being wrapped by his ministers as recommendation with scrutiny. Because, Hadiza’s appointment clearly indicated that the President’s gospel of reform in the transport sector is not for real.

    I thought the seat should be advertised, certain number of candidates should be pre-qualified, interviewed and or examination conducted preferably by a foreign consultant, and the candidate with the highest score appointed. With that, we are sure of the quality of the person so appointed. Let’s call a spade by its name: el-Rufai asked his friend, the Minister of Transport, RotimiAmaechi to recommend Hadiza for the post and got the President to approve the recommendation of the Transport Minister.

    What we have now is a clear case of Square Peg in a Round hole which clearly indicated a clear evidence of nepotism!

     

    • Muhammad Auta,

    Jalingo, Taraba State.

  • El-Rufai appoints new chief of staff, others

    El-Rufai appoints new chief of staff, others

    Governor Nasir El-Rufa of Kaduna State has on Monday appointed Hadiza Bala Usman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) as Chief of Staff.

    The newly appointed Chief of Staff, Ms. Usman, has served the APC in a number of committees and capacities as the Administrative Secretary of the Buhari Presidential Campaign Organization, Member APC Strategy Committee and Member Secretary APC Elections Planning Committee, among others.

    Similarly, during the gubernatorial campaign of El-Rufai, she was Director of Finance in the Campaign Organization, and later the Kaduna State APC Campaign Council.

    It would be recalled that Ms. Hadiza Usman started the strongest campaign for the rescue of the kidnapped Chibok Girls with the hashtag #BringBackOurGirls which went viral all around the world.

    Other appointments include Special Assistant on New Media, Bashir Dabo and Personal Secretary to the governor, Saude Amina Mohammed.

  • BringBackOurGirls to mark 100 days of girls kidnap in Abuja, Ibadan, New York

    BringBackOurGirls to mark 100 days of girls kidnap in Abuja, Ibadan, New York

    The BringBackOurGirls campaigners will today mark the 100 days of the Chibok girls’ abduction with programmes in Lagos, Abuja, Ibadan and New York.

    A statement by the group endorsed by  Hadiza Bala Usman, Oby Ezekwesili, Aisha Oyebode, Yemisi Ransome-Kuti, Betty Anyanwy-Akeredolu, Amina Hanga, and Eleanor Ann Nwadinobi reads: “Wednesday, July 23rd will mark 100 days since 276 girls were savagely abducted from their school in Chibok, Borno State. 57 escaped and 219 remain in captivity. The families and community have suffered deep anguish seeking effective rescue to end the peril that befell their daughters who had gone to school in search of knowledge.

    “In those 100 days, the Bring Back Our Girls Campaign has focused on creating awareness of the abduction to ensure that it is a priority issue requiring action and compelling the right sets of action for a positive outcome. We have engaged various stakeholders – the Presidency, the National Assembly, the office of the National Security Adviser, the Chief of Defense Staff, the Borno State Government & other State Governments, ECOWAS member countries and UN agencies to name a few.

    “Through our various meetings, our singular message has been to demand that the Federal Government perform its fundamental duty of ensuring the security and the welfare of its citizens. As we denounce the wave of terror and insecurity across the country, we continue to demand that the Federal Government deploy its resources to ensure that the missing girls are brought home, and the errors leading from three-weeks of delayed action are remedied.

    “To amplify our voices in demanding that these girls be brought home now and alive, on the 100th day, there will be a variety of activities around the world. These include:

    o Ibadan: Press Conference at the BRECAN Centre at 10 am;

    o Abuja: Special sit-out ceremony at the Unity Fountain at 3 pm;

    o Lagos: Remembrance service at the Wall of Missing Girls at Falomo Roundabout at 4pm;

    o New York: Candlelight vigil at the Nigerian Consulate at 5.30pm.

    “There will also be events in India, Pakistan, the UK and most world capitals where there are teachers’ organisations in partnership with the UN Special Envoy’s Office of Gordon Brown. Organisations participating are World at School, Girls not Brides, Global March Against Child Labour, Walk Free, Educational International and ITa.”

     

     

  • Girls’ abduction: Women protest at N’ Assembly

    Over 500 Nigerian Women on Wednesday defied heavy rainfall to protest the abduction of about 234 female students at the National Assembly.
    Women carrying various placards with inscriptions such as – “Rescue our Chibok girls, “Bring back our girls alive,” “Where are my sisters,” “Let peace and justice reign,” and “Our daughters going for N2000″ besieged the venue.
    The rally which started at about d 3.30pm was led by a tearful former Education Minister, Oby Ezekwesili, human rights activists, Mariam Uwais and Saudatu Sani among other leaders of various civil society groups.
    Despite the rain, the protesters were not deterred as they marched towards the National assembly to compel those in authorities to take more definite action concerning the disappearance of the girls.
    The Coordinator of the Human Rights Agenda Network, Hadiza Bala Usman, said the reading from Chibok was that all Nigerians, including the military and the security personnel are at great risk of being consumed by the aggression of those who have ambushed the peace, security and prosperity of Nigerians.
    She added that the conflicting reports about the exact number of girls who are still missing and even the operations are regrettable.