Monday, 12 May 2014
Abducted school girls: Women threaten to protest naked
Members of Women Arise, a civil society group,
on Monday threatened to protest half-naked in
Chibok, Borno State, if the abducted schoolgirls
are not rescued within the next two weeks.
The women echoed the President of Women
Arise, Dr. Joe Odumakin, who said the protest,
which began in Lagos State on Monday would go
to different states and end in Chibok and
Sambisa forest if the girls were not rescued in
two weeks.
According to Odumakin, the protest would
continue in Enugu State on Tuesday and move
on to other places such as Kaduna, Lokoja, and
Jigawa states.
She said it was unfortunate that there was no
information of the whereabouts of the girls
almost a month after the girls were abducted.
She said, “It’s a nationwide protest. We are
dressed in white, because white signifies purity;
most of those girls were virgins. There is a lot
government need to do. Look at our borders
that are porous. What are we doing about it?
“We are going round all the states. We will be in
Enugu tomorrow. We will be in Lokoja, Kaduna,
Onitsha, and Akure, and at the end of 14 days.
God forbid if they don’t get these girls back, we
will go to Chibok half-naked and we will enter
the bush to look for them.”
The protesters marched from the premises of
the Lagos Television in Agidingbi to the
governor’s office in Alausa carrying placards
with various inscriptions including ‘Shekau: Find
goods to sell, not our girls’, ‘Have we lost our
humanity?’ and ‘Hunt down the defilers of
innocent girls’.
In a letter to President Goodluck Jonathan
submitted to Governor Babatunde Fashola, the
group demanded that the girls should be
rehabilitated when they return and
compensation should paid to their parents for
the trauma they have suffered. The group said
government should recognise the girls as heroes
of the war against terrorism.
It also demanded that government should
ensure that the girls take the West African
Senior School Certificate Examination, which
were said to be ongoing when they were
abducted, and that scholarship should be
offered them up to university level.
Fashola, who received the protesters, said he
would transmit the letter to the President
immediately and asked them to be cautious on
their demand for the information on the rescue
operation.
Fashola said, “I understand your demand for
information. This is usually the case when
crimes like this are committed.
“Regrettably, I do not have any information to
share with you. But I would also like you to
know that when search and rescue operations
are being undertaken, especially with people
who have shown mindless capacity and disregard
human life, there is safety in managing
information closely.
“Chibok is a very dark experience for our nation.
It is a difficult time for our nation. It may yet be
our most defining moment.
“It would be defining if we can find the children.
It would be defining if after that happens we can
keep this brotherhood and sisterhood alive.
“Many nations have turn to greatness when they
faced situations like this and developed a sense
of unity where religion and ethnicity do not
matter anymore. Chibok may be a defining
moment that finally unites us and eliminates all
our fault lines as a people.”
Labels:
INSECURITY
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment