Tag: Nigerian students

  • African envoys hit out at India over attacks on Nigerian students

    African envoys in Delhi on Monday called the recent mob attacks on some Nigerian students near the national capital as “racial” and “xenophobic acts”.

    In a statement, the heads of African missions slammed the Indian government for failing to adequately condemn the violent incident.

    “No known, sufficient and visible deterring measures were taken” by the Indian government.

    “These reprehensible events, both outstanding and unresolved cases against Africans, were not sufficiently condemned by the Indian authorities,” the group said.

    It has agreed to “call for an independent investigation by the Human Rights Council as well as other human rights bodies”.

    The mob attack on the Nigerian students took place on March 27 and it coincided with a protest that was organised by online groups who blamed the unexplained death of a teenage student on the African community.

    The protesters had alleged that the student, identified as Manish Khari, was supplied drugs by Africans who live in the area.

    India has described the attack on Nigerian students as “deplorable” and said it is committed to ensuring the safety and security of all foreigners in this country.

    “People from Africa, including students and youth, remain our valued partners,” the External Affairs Ministry has said.

    The police had said that some seven people have been arrested in connection with the mob attack so far, adding that efforts are on to arrest the other suspects.

    Attacks on Africans in and around Delhi is not uncommon.

    In 2016, several Nigerians were beaten up in Delhi’s Chhatarpur area.

  • Foreign schools advises Nigerian students

    Six universities from the US and UK stormed Lagos for the Linden Boarding School expo which was organized by Alts Consulting.

    At the event, Managing Partner, Alts Consulting,  Anthonia Foluke Sawyerr, said the purpose of the event was to guide students who are interested in studying abroad.

    “We assist students who want to study abroad. It is our duty to help the students understand their career choices and discover if they are suitable for scholarships. We give students and parents visa guidance and assist them with making payments.”

    The six schools that participated were CAIS Boarding Schools, St Catherine, Ontario, Canada; Riverside Military Academy, Gainesville, Georgia USA; St Andrew’s College, Aurora, Ontario, Canada; St Michaels University School, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada; Strathallan School, Forgandenny, Pertshire UK; The Village, Houston, Texas, USA.

    Contrary to the belief of many, Sawyerr said that the population of international students, especially from Nigeria, was not as high as people had been made to believe.

    ”Studying abroad is a global thing. Nigerians are not the only people who study abroad. There are so many other nations going to different countries to study. So many students cross to other countries to broaden their knowledge. If you go to the UK, for instance, the largest number of international students are Germans.

    “We hold conferences with students and parents, so we can  manage their expectations.   One important aspect of what we do is that we do school referrals.

    “Schools from the US and UK come to Nigeria to meet with prospective parents and students. Every year, we hold boarding fairs and whenever we have a fair, we try to take advantage of the school representatives that come here to have seminars for teachers. The fair is completely free because it is covered by the project. It is a big part of what we do and we really enjoy it.”

  • Canada woos Nigerian students

    Very soon, Nigerians will be able to undergo foundation programmes that would allow them continue second year studies in universities in Canada.

    The Canadian Foundation programme to be implemented by Westerfield College, Yaba, is scheduled for launch at the Eko Hotel and Suites Tuesday next week.

    CEO of Westerfield College, Mr Mike Dosunmu, said at a press conference on Monday that the programme is being funded by the Canadian government to woo more Nigerian students to the  country.

    “The government of Canada is giving us money to run this programme. The government is interested in getting more Nigerian students to study in Canada.  We will be offering all courses apart from Medicine,” he said.

    Dosunmu said the college has a track record in preparing students for second year of the university having run foundation programmes of many universities in the United Kingdom and other countries.  He added that the college has qualified teachers, Nigerians, who are well grounded in their fields.

    “We have been a school that has produced students who went on to be first class graduates of the universities they attended abroad.  We have been in existence for six years now.  Our lecturers are well qualified.  What we actually offer is post secondary education to our students,” he said.

    Dosunmu said the programme would save Nigerian parents up to 50,000 Canadian Dollars that would have cost their wards to travel to Canada for their first year.

    “Parents would be saving up to 50,000 CAD if their children pass through the foundation programme here in Nigeria in the first year rather than go to Canada.  The average cost of tuition per year is about 20,000 CAD.  Then there are other expenses,” he said.

  • Our three-month ordeal in Turkey’s maximum prison -Nigerian students detained over coup saga

    Sent to Turkey for university education by parents who wanted the best for them, two young Nigerians recall the horror of being bundled into Silivri Maximum Security Prison where they joined Turkish military personnel, civil servants, professionals and other suspects detained over alleged involvement in Turkey’s July 15 military coup. They are among scores of Nigerian students who came home without being allowed to collect their graduation certificates, academic transcripts, electronics and other items which the Turkish authorities said they would return only after the completion of investigation early next year. They spoke with Assistant Editor, JIDE BABALOLA, in Abuja. 

    It was almost four months since Mohammed Abdullahi and Hassan Danjuma Adamu were detained by security agencies in Turkey in the wake of a military coup that rattled the country in July this year, but they still appeared somewhat dazed by the experience. The two Nigerian students were picked up from their hostels and detained for three months in Turkey’s maximum prison over their alleged involvement in the aborted military coup of July 15, 2016.

    Although they are happy to be home, the two young men, who grew up in homes where moral and religious instructions predominate, are still enmeshed in confusion. They had travelled to far away Turkey dreaming to complete their education, after which they will undergo the compulsory one-year national youth service and begin earning a decent living and making their families proud. On the contrary, however, they found themselves in handcuffs, dumped at Silivri Maximum Security Prison.

    In the aftermath of the July coup, the Turkish government had launched a crackdown that led to the imposition of an emergency rule, which in turn hardened the climate of official impunity. While the Turkish Justice Minister, Bekir Bozdag, has fiercely denied widespread allegations of abuse of detainees amid mounting criticism from Western governments and international rights groups, the European Commission’s annual progress report concerning Turkey’s increasingly unlikely membership in the European Union (EU) alleges unjust treatment of randomly detained persons.

    “There were reports of serious human rights violations, including alleged widespread ill treatment and torture of detainees. The crackdown has continued since and has been broadened to pro-Kurdish and other opposition voices,” the commission alleged.

    New York-based Human Rights Watch’s most recent report basically agrees with EU’s observations, citing at least 13 credible cases of torture since the attempted coup. And the Turkish press is scarcely documenting the alarming spike in allegations of ill-treatment, as most critical outlets have been shut and many critical journalists locked up on the flimsiest of terror charges.

    The two young Nigerians tasted a bit of this at a time when Hakan Cakil, Turkish Ambassador to Nigeria, said reports of Nigerians arrested in his country were exaggerated, insisting that Nigerian students were safe.

    Then, there was the issue of the Muhammadu Buhari administration’s refusal to accede to the Erdogan administration’s request that Nigeria should shut down schools linked to followers of Muhammed Fethullah Gülen, the US-based Turkish preacher, former imam and writer, who was once a critical ally in facilitating Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s political success.

    Mohammed Abdullahi, who studied Mathematics and Computer Science at Bahçeşehir University in Istanbul, Turkey told The Nation his story when asked to explain how he got ‘involved’ with the July coup.

    He said: “I was sleeping soundly in my hostel when the constant noise of helicopter propeller in the sky woke me up. I did not even have the faintest idea that something like a coup was going on in the city. I only got to know about it from the updates that some friends were adding on Facebook.

    “Later, on July 28, the person that sweeps the apartment that we were living in reported to the police that the building belongs to the Jamaat (linked to the Hizmet movement, followers of Gülen’s doctrines) which was branded as an armed terrorist group by the police. So, the police came and took us to the police station, we were interrogated but there was nothing found on us.

    “The next day, they took us directly to the court, and from court, they took us to prison straightaway. We were in the Maximum Security Prison for three months and were not allowed to see anyone except for those of us who had family members around. It was after one and a half months that someone came from the Nigerian Embassy. He talked to us and assured us that they were working on our issue and Alhamdulillah, we are out now.

    “We were detained with soldiers and other civilians who were also accused (of involvement in the coup), and there were people with different cases. In our own case, the allegation was that we were members of an armed terrorist group,” he stated.

    The Nation learnt that the ‘crime’ of the students, which turned them into ‘suspects’ for the Turkish authorities was probably that of living in a hostel that belonged to the Hizmet movement, which is now labelled an “armed terrorist group” in spite of its dependence on intellectual debates, humanitarian activities, quality education and inter-religious dialogue to galvanize people.

    “Thus, we were ‘suspects’. Right now, our computers, phones and our electronics are with them. They said we should wait till January 10 when the emergency situation will be over, and then they will send them to us.

    “In the prison, they normally brought lunch and dinner, and there was hot water for some hours in the day time. There was a canteen, and we wrote if we wanted to buy something from the canteen. They would bring the list and the price tags for you.

    “I was lucky I had some money, so we were able to survive on that throughout our stay there.

    “Officials at the Nigerian Embassy in Turkey tried their best and even our friends outside too, even though I do not know what exactly each person did to draw attention to our plight. You can’t imagine how happy we were when a Nigerian embassy official came. Before then, for two good months, my friend and I were only seeing and interacting with the Turkish ‘suspects’,”

    Recalling his own experience, Hassan Adamu said: “We were there for three months but were allowed to call our families just once. It was really difficult because I had never imagined myself in prison. I am a student. My father sent me to Turkey to study and then this happened.

    “On the 15th of July, that was when it happened. I was actually going to play football because my friend invited me. I went to my hostel to dress up and go to the field but suddenly realised that I forgot my glasses and the house key in school,” he said as he explained the genesis of his troubles.

    Having grown up in a home where much premium is placed on good behaviour, diminutive Adamu, who can be easily mistaken for a secondary school student, still feels some nightmares and psychological trauma.

    Although he was only waiting to collect his graduation certificate and study transcripts after completing his bachelor’s degree in Computer Studies at Bahçeşehir University in Istanbul, Yobe State-born Hassan Adamu was arrested by the Turkish police on July 28.

    “It is true that I was really scared and we were in a police cell for 14 days before we were taken to a stinking prison with no proper ventilation, where we met several Turkish soldiers and other professionals accused of involvement in the coup,” he said.

    Although there was not even a tiny shred of evidence to implicate Hassan and Mohammed, those who arrested them found no need to give any specific explanation to justify the broad accusation levelled against the Nigerian students. Briskly, they were made to pass through the rounds at the court and then taken in handcuffs like every other suspect to Silivri Maximum Security Prison.

    Officially known in Turkish as Silivri Ceza İnfaz Kurumları Kampüsü, the approximately 11, 000 capacity prison, according to www.wikipedia.org, is a high-security state correctional institution complex in the Silivri District of Istanbul Province in Turkey.

    “Covering an area of 437,000 m2 (4,700,000 sq ft) and stretching over 955,354 m2 (10,283,340 sq ft) land, the prison complex is composed of nine blocks, one open and eight L-type closed correctional institutions having a total capacity for 10,904 inmates,” it stated in its description of the state of the facility in 2008 when it was completed.

    According to Hassan Adamu, some of the prison officials made futile recommendations that security agents should rather deport the students as the facility was not meant to accommodate foreign prisoners. “They made us to do frog jump, and hit us in the back in the process,” he recalled.

    According to the somewhat shy young men, soldiers and civilians accused of coup plotting along with convicts with various criminal career backgrounds populate the prison. “There were many people accused of committing various offences. Our own case was that we were members of (Fetullah Gülen) Armed Terrorist Group because of the school and hostel we lived in.

    Founded by Enver Yucel, who was President of the World Education Entrepreneurs Association, President of the European Test Preparation Center Union and also a member of the Board of Trustees of New York University’s Steinhardt School Dean’s Council; the Bahçeşehir Uğur Education Foundation, which runs Bahçeşehir University, was once accused by some online groups of being part of the Gulen Charter Schools USA agenda to “dominate education worldwide”.

    Enver Yucel had great success in increasing the number of educational institutions to 200, currently providing education to more than 150,000 students worldwide. In 1994, Mr. Yücel established Bahçeşehir K-12 Schools, which provide ‘an intensive, comprehensive and analytical education to qualified, multilingual, analytical thinkers as graduates’.

    Furthermore, in 1998, he established Bahçeşehir Uğur Education Foundation (BUEF), which provides educational funds to students who are studying at Uğur Education Institutions or other such institutions, but who do not have sufficient financial resources to continue their education.

    Notwithstanding such aims and the benefits to Turkish citizens and others around the globe who enjoy scholarship and the benefits of quality education, all such pro-Gülen educational organisations, including the ones established in Nigeria have been branded as enemies by the Turkish government. Hence, the abortive request that President Buhari should help cripple such ventures by closing down the schools immediately.

    “I have never heard that the Turkish schools in Nigeria have done anything illegally since the time they began operation in Nigeria; I attended one of such excellent schools so, I see no reason why the school should be closed.

    “Rather, I want President Muhammadu Buhari to take serious action over how Turkish authorities treated Nigerians who were studying there. Apart from us, they deported about 50 students and most of these students were not even allowed to take their transcripts.

    “President Buhari should not let the matter die like that. He should take serious action,” Mohamed said.

    In spite of their horrible experience, which runs contrary to their parents’ expectations, the two young men may still have cause to thank God that their ordeal ended after three months. Reports indicate that pregnant Buket Buyukcelebi, a female researcher at Kilis University, who was sacked and jailed three months ago under an emergency decree, most likely over alleged links to Gülen, is being held in an overcrowded Gaziantep prison with her 13-month-old son.

    Some 20 other detainees suspected of links with Gülen are said to have committed suicide in suspicious circumstances and the Turkish press reported that an engineer accused of leaking state secrets on behalf of Gulen, was found dead in his cell in Kirklareli prison on November 10.

    Altogether, www.turkishpurge.com which has been keeping tabs on verifiable aspects of the crackdown that followed the July military coup in Turkey states that 105, 097 have been sacked, 76, 485 suspects are being detained, 2, 099 schools, dormitories and universities have been shut down while 6, 337 academics have lost their jobs, 3, 640 prosecutors and judges have been dismissed with 186 media outlets shut down and 144 journalists arrested.

    “In any case, we are just happy to be back home in our country, Nigeria,” Hassan said.

  • Turkey waives tuition fees for Nigerian students

    The Turkish Government on Friday said it has waived tuition fees for Nigerian students studying in private universities in the country before they were closed down.

    The government closed down private universities and other establishments operating in the country following last month’s failed coup in the country.

    Turkish Ambassador to Nigeria, Mr. Hakan Cakil, stated this when he visited The Minister of Education, Mallam Adamu Adamu, in his office in Abuja.

    Mr. Cakil, according to a statement issued by the ministry’s Deputy Director, (Press), Ben Bem-Goong, said Nigerian students in private universities in the country have been moved to public schools for them to continue their education.

    “Following the coup attempt in Turkey which led to the closure of many private Universities, Nigerian students studying across Turkish private varsities which have been closed down have now been moved by the Turkish Government to public schools in that country where they will pay very little or no tuition fees at all,” the statement said.

     

  • Nigerian students elect leaders

    Nigerian students elect leaders

    The Nigerian Students’ Society (NSS)  of  the Leeds University in the United Kingdom (UK) have elected their leaders, who will administer their affairs for a year.

    The students held the election during the society’s yearly general meeting and congress.

    The election took place in RM 2 in the Leeds University Students’ Union (LUSU) building. At the end of the poll, Anietie Usen Anietie, a Law student, was elected the president, while Salim Ata is the Vice President and Amanda Umobi, General Secretary.

    Other elected officers are Events and Logistic Officer Ramo Ayoka; Hospitality Manager Ayeesh Bala; Public Relations Manager Yasmine Ajudua; Secretary of Treasury Teslim Oderinu, and Sport Secretary Victor Enendo.

    The outgoing president, Kelechi Anyikude, urged the incoming executive to be proactive and work as a team. He said they must hit the ground running, noting that the society still had challenges.

    The Chairman of the Electoral Committee, Femi Omoniyi, a doctoral student, congratulated the new leaders, appealing to them to work hard in repositioning NSS for the interest of the members.

    At the swearing-in, members expressed happiness on the conduct of the election and the electioneering. The outgoing General Secretary, Oluwaloseyi Babaeko, a Master’s student of Politics and International Studies, said: “I considered it a rare privilege and honour to have served NSS diligently. I wish all the newly-elected officials the very best of luck in administering the affairs of the society.’’

     

     

  • Nigerian students conquer Africa

    •To represent region in U.S. contest

    Students of the Federal University of Petroleum Resources in Effurun (FUPRE), Delta State, have won the Petrol Bowl Competition organised by the Society of Petroleum Engineers International (SPEI) for all students’ chapters of Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE) in Africa.

    The FUPRE students also came  third  in a Petrol Quiz by the body.

    This news was broken in a letter of commendation to the Vice-Chancellor, Prof Akii Ibhadode, by the SPE Section 104 Chairman in Warri, Mr O.G. Bruce.

    In the letter, Bruce indicated that it was the second time FUPRE chapter of SPE would win the contest and make Nigeria proud.

    The competitions were held during the just-concluded Africa Regional Student Technical Conference and Exhibition at the Petroleum Training Institute (PTI) Conference Centre. For their feat, FUPRE students will represent Africa at the Annual Technical Conference and Exhibition (ATCE) coming up in September in Texas, United States.

    The letter reads: “The SPE Section 104 Warri congratulates FUPRE SPE student chapter, the university management, lecturers and staff of the Department of Petroleum Engineering for this outstanding performance.”

    It should be recalled that the students came second in 2013 edition of the national SPE competition and the  2014 edition of International SPE Competition for all sub-regional chapters. These made them to participate in the global competition held in Netherlands last year.

    Prof Ibhadode hailed the students and their lecturers for the feat, which he said had placed the school on the world map for academic excellence. He said the school would continue to encourage students for greater academic exploits.

    The students, who participated in the contests, include Samuelson Ehwarieme, Samuel Henry, Sodiq Sulaimon, Godwin Tesi, Isaac Ajimosun and Emmanuel Ikehi.

  • ‘Nigerian students now have brighter chances to study in US’

    ‘Nigerian students now have brighter chances to study in US’

    Mr. Emin Godek  is the Managing Director of  Aydinlar Educational Consultancy Company, Abuja. In this interview with Assistant Editor, GBADE OGUNWALE, he speaks on how Aydinlar is facilitating admission of Nigerian students  into internationally recognised universities abroad. He also speaks on how the  Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signed between Aydinlar and a United States (US)-based Study and Travel Agency has provided more opportunities for Nigerians to study in the US. 

    Can you throw more light on the services your organisation renders to Nigerians seeking university placements abroad?

    Aydinlar Education Consultancy is an education company operating here in Nigeria and based in Abuja. We promote students with opportunities to study abroad. We cover countries like Turkey, United Kingdom (UK), United States, Canada, Cyprus, among others. Beside university placements, we also organise other programmes like summer schools, SAT and TOEFEL programmes. We also have certificate programmes, teachers training and we even work with state governments in Nigeria and private sector operators that want to train their staff, depending on the package they want. They give us the proposal and we organise programmes according to their wish. We just signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Study and Travel based in Chicago, United States. So, there is going to be more opportunities for Nigerian students and different companies to enjoy study opportunities in America and other countries.

    When was  Aydinlar Educational Consulting Company  established in Nigeria?

    The company was established in 2011 but I have been into this programme since 2006.

    What is the difference between your company and other admission agencies?

    I am an educationist. I don’t call my company  an agent because there is a great difference between Aydinlar Educational Consultancy and other companies. Why? For example, when we send students to Turkey, we don’t just send them like that. We organise them for the best education anyone can get. We also facilitate their guardians to travel to Turkey; they stay there for one week to assist them obtain resident permit and other relevant issues like accommodation and documentation with the ministry of education.

    In 2014, I organised excursion for parents to visit their children. From the airport  to accommodation, we assisted them. We have office in Istanbul, in Ankara. So our representatives there watch, follow and guide them. And we also get timely reports from the universities and share with their parents. If there is any problem, our office will assist them. If they get any other problems outside, we directly communicate with them. And we organise trips for parents too. We also have organisations that work with us in the US and we send our students there too. Though we were established in 2011, Aydinlar Educational Consultancy is now well known in Nigeria. Presently, we work with about seven states in Nigeria and they send students abroad through us.

    How many branches do you have in Nigeria?

    Our main office is in Abuja, but we have offices in Ogun, Lagos, Kano and Kaduna states.

    There are growing concerns that most Nigerian students abroad are not studying in good universities. How true is that?

    The universities we send students to are internationally recognised in Turkey, US and the UK. We signed MoU with Oxford Vision based in London and we can send students to any university in the UK for a foundation programme  and in America, we have now signed an MoU with the Chicago- based Study and Travel.

    What are the basic requirements for your organisation to facilitate admission for students who may want to study abroad?

    Such students can apply with five credits in the West Africa Examination Council (WAEC), Mathematics and English Language inclusive. But if the students want to study Medicine, Pharmacy or top Engineering courses, the universities always insist on B and A (distinctions). Application can also be made with the Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB) scores of 180 and above.  We also have scholarship for students if they have 250  and above in JAMB and  5 As  (distinction in five subjects)  in WAEC. But academic performance is not enough for me. I also interview students for moral character. There are  good students from Nigeria but for example, if we have 100 students abroad from  Nigeria and three are involved in negative activities, the three could soil Nigeria’s reputation. So we screen intending students. We don’t send too many students to a single university.

    Talking about Nigerian students in Turkey, I prefer qualified students from Nigeria so that they can be good friends of Turkey and in the future there will be a bridge between Nigeria and Turkey. I want Nigerians who can work for organisations in Turkey in the future. People who can represent Turkey. Nowadays, Nigeria-Turkey relation is growing. So, many companies are coming from Turkey to Nigeria and some others from Nigeria to Turkey. Those companies from Turkey will look  for engineers and staff who can assist them with little Turkish, who know the Turkish culture. Actually, what we are doing is helping Nigeria and Turkey build enduring friendship.

    Do you work with any government agencies in Nigeria?

    We work with Kaduna,  Yobe, Kano, Katsina, Gombe and Lagos states. These states give scholarships to hundreds of their students and we help them to place the students in good schools. So far, we don’t have any problems with the students and we hope to improve on the number of states we are working with.

     

  • Nigerian students in UK raise money for IDPs

    Disturbed by the condition of living in camps of Internally Displaced People (IDPs) in the country, Nigerian students studying at the University of Leeds in the United Kingdom have held a concert to raise money for the victims of Boko Haram insurgency.

    The concert, tagged Verses for peace, was held at the auditorium of St. Mark’s Church in Leeds. Dignitaries at event included the Nigeria High Commissioner to the UK, Alhaji Dalhatu Tafida, represented by Mr Simon Olgah. Others are Pastor Raph Ibiyeye, Mrs Majestic Marvina, Mr Sammy Omotese, Mr Martin Chukwemeka, Mr Osahon Ogieva and other members of the Nigerian community in the UK.

    The President, Nigerian Students’ Society (NSS), Kelechi Anyikude, a doctoral student of the university, said there was need to alleviate the suffering of the displaced people, noting that the the war on insurgency had deprived them of their livelihood.

    Anyikude urged the participants to observe a minute silence in honour of the Nigerian soldiers and the civilians who died in the fight against Boko Haram. He said supporting the military to win the war would be the best honour to the memories of the dead.

    Olgah, who spoke on Tafida’s behalf, hailed the students’ initiative, saying the envoy would support all lawful initiatives to assist government in its efforts to cater for the needs of the IDPs.

    Olgah promised to relate back the students’ message to the ambassador.

    Ibiyeye, a pastor of the Redeemed Church in Leeds, enjoined the students not to be used by politicians to arrange false protest for political gain. He also prayed for peace during general elections, appealing to politicians to play politics with the fear of God.

    For Mrs Marvina, the idea of the concert deserved commendation. Miss Bisola Babalola, the NSS Vice President, said the concert was the student’s way to contribute their quota to development of Nigeria.

    The VP, a final year Law student, emphasised that there is need for strong cooperation. She said there were no negotiations to Nigeria’s unity, urging everyone to unite to collectively build the Nigeria of citizens’ dreams.

    Anyikude praised President Goodluck Jonathan on his determination to end insurgency in North, adding: “The money raised would be sent back to Nigeria to help the internally displaced people.”

    Femi Omoniyi coordinated the concert, while Bamidele Odusote’s dance step attracted people to the event.

     

  • Boko Haram: Nigerian students in Canada stage protest over rising insurgency

    Boko Haram: Nigerian students in Canada stage protest over rising insurgency

    Nigerian students in Canada, at the weekend expressed worry over the rising spate of insurgency in the country.

    The students under the aegis of York University, Canada and auspices of Nigerian Student Association (NSA) in collaboration with Amnesty International at York University (AIY), during a protest, urged the Federal Government to step-up strategies that will address the situation.

    The President, NSA, York University, Ms. Mary Asekome, in a statement in Abuja expressed disappointment in the government for failing to curb insurgency in the country.‎

    She said that the government has not fulfilled its constitutional responsibility of providing security for the citizens.

    Asemoke accused the government of failing to demonstrate any serious intention to stop the activities of the terrorist group over the past six years despite pressure from within the country and from international community.

    She appealed to Nigerian officials to ensure resources meant for fighting the terrorists are not diverted.

    Asemoke said: “I have confidence in the Nigerian military because they will deliver if they are properly equipped and motivated for the task.

    “We are worried at this point where the insurgents have turned out to be monsters that have brought untold bitterness in the lives of people in northern Nigeria.”

    According to her, it is estimated that more than 15,000 civilians had been killed by the sect between July 2009 and January 2015, in series of attacks occurring mainly in northern part of the country.

    Asemoke alleged that corruption was hampering the fight against the insurgents.

    This, she said, has hampered the effort by the international community to assist the government in the fight against insurgents.

    “Corruption in the security services and human rights abuses committed by the military forced the withdrawal of the foreign help.

    “It is also believed that the inability of the government to make life meaningful to its citizen have made them a ready instrument in the hand of the Boko Haram sect whose army has been growing at an alarming rate,” she added.

    Also, the Co-founder, The Change Group Jerry Solomon, who took part in the protest, berated the government for trivializing the issue of Boko Haram.

    Solomon expressed displeasure over what he called downplaying of damages done by the insurgents to the nation.

    “The idea of the government downplaying the magnitude of damages the sect is doing to the nation is unfortunate.

    “I urge the government to map out effective strategies that will address this big challenge facing the nation than giving false report that are aimed at trivializing the activities of the sect,” he stated.