Tuesday 8 July 2014
Jonathan won’t endanger lives of Chibok girls -Abati
President Goodluck Jonathan will not bow to pressure being
mounted on him by his critics to publicly reveal details of
Federal Government’s efforts aimed at rescuing the over 200
schoolgirls abducted in Chibok, Borno State on April
14.Jonathan’s Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Dr.
Reuben Abati, disclosed this in a letter to the editor titled
“Nigeria is aggressively confronting the Boko Haram threat by
Reuben Abati” published by Washington Post on Tuesday.Abati
wrote that the President would not put the lives of the girls at
risk by publicly revealing details of the recovery operation for
the sake of satisfying his critics.He was responding to an earlier
opinion written by one Karen Attiah and published on July
3.Attiah had claimed in the piece titled
“#BringBackMyEasyDays,” claimed that Jonathan has a “do-
nothing” attitude toward rescuing the girls.But Abati wrote that
contrary to that claim, the President had been working intensely
on the challenge posed to his administration by the Boko Haram
sect,The presidential spokesman wrote, “Karen Attiah’s July 3
op-ed, “#BringBackMyEasyDays,” was incorrect on the facts
surrounding Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan’s efforts to
rescue the more than 200 young girls abducted in April by the
terrorist group Boko Haram.“The claim that the President has a
“do-nothing” attitude toward rescuing the girls is no different
than what was written about President Obama’s decision not to
disclose his efforts to seize and arrest the alleged ringleader of
the 2012 terrorist attacks in Benghazi, Libya, that killed four
Americans — until he did just that.“Mr. Jonathan won’t put the
lives of these girls at risk by publicly revealing details of the
recovery operation for the sake of satisfying his critics.“Despite
Ms. Attiah’s claims to the contrary, even before the abductions,
the President was engaged in international intelligence-sharing
involving West Africa, Europe and the United States, and he had
also launched the Counter-Terrorism Centre in Nigeria.“He has
been working intensely on the very challenging situation posed
by Boko Haram since assuming office, including declaring a
state of emergency in May 2013 in the three most affected
northern states.”
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