Wednesday

What 160 Parents , 57 Escape Girls Of Chibok Schoolgirls , Escapees Told Jonathan

Information that almost 100 days after the over 200 schoolgirls were kidnapped from their hostel at Government Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State, some 160 parents of the abducted girls as well as 57 of the students who escaped from their captors,  met with President Goodluck Jonathan today at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

Reports has is that the visit is coming on the heels of the botched meeting of last week, wherein nine parents and some of the escapee girls had shunned the invitation of President Jonathan to meet with them, in the aftermath of the visit of 17-year-old Pakistani girl child education activist, Malala Yousafzai.
The Chibok students were abducted on April 14. It will be 100 days tomorrow since they have been in the enclave of their captors, the Boko Haram terrorist group.
In a statement released by the Public Relations Officer (PRO), Kiboku Chibok Area Development Association (KADA), Mr. Rotimi Olawale, the Chibok community in Abuja maintained that it was incorrect to blame the #BringBackOurGirls campaigners for the decision made by the parents in the interest of their community.

He said the decision to revert to other family members was to incorporate every stakeholder in the matter and to avoid discord and suspicion on a change of plan from the original mission to Abuja, and that it was why they reached out to Malala's team and through them to the Presidency to request a new date for an expanded and more representative meeting that has a legitimate mandate to meet with the president.
So at the meeting, President Goodluck Jonathan met for the first time Tuesday with parents of 219 kidnapped Borno schoolgirls and dozens of classmates who managed to escape from their Islamic extremist captors.
Jonathan assured them of his determination that those still in captivity “are brought out alive,” presidential spokesman Reuben Abati told reporters after the meeting.
It was “a very successful event,” said Abati. Some of the girls described their escapes and Jonathan gave assurances that the education of the girls and their still-captive classmates would not suffer in any way, he said.
“Mr. President reassured them of the federal government determination and his personal determination to ensure that the girls that are still in captivity are brought out alive. He made it clear that is the main objective of the government,” said Abati.
The parents emerged from the closed door meeting without showing emotion but some shook hands with the president. Some of the escaped schoolgirls smiled for photographers after the meeting.
Journalists were prevented from speaking to the girls and the parents by Nigerian security.
The delegation of 177 people met with Jonathan, said Lawan Abana, spokesman for the community of Chibok, the town where the schoolgirls were kidnapped. An AP reporter counted 51 of the 57 girls who escaped after their abduction on April 15.
At least 11 of the parents have died since the kidnappings – seven in a village attack this month and four of heart attacks and other illnesses that the Chibok community blames on the trauma, according to residents.
Jonathan was accompanied in the meeting by the ministers of education and finance, and his national security adviser. Also present was the Gov. Kashim Shettima of Borno state, from which the girls were abducted. Shettima has accused Jonathan of not doing enough to save the girls and has angered the government with his charges that Boko Haram fighters are better armed and motivated than Nigeria’s military.
Tuesday’s meeting came after some parents refused to meet Nigeria’s leader last week. For months the parents have been asking to see the president and he finally agreed to a request from Pakistani girls-education activist Malala Yousafzai, who had met with the parents.
Jonathan blamed activists of the BringBackOurGirls campaign for politicizing the abductions and influencing the parents. The parents said they needed time to decide who would attend.
The failure of Jonathan’s government to rescue the girls has prompted an international campaign and daily BringBackOurGirls rallies in Abuja, the capital, to ensure attention for the girls’ plight.
Some of the parents and community leaders of Chibok have made public statements urging Jonathan to negotiate with the girls’ captors. Boko Haram is demanding a swap for detained fighters in exchange for the girls. So far, Jonathan has refused.
Nigeria’s Defense Ministry, also criticized for not quickly rescuing the girls, has said that it knows where they are being held but that it fears any military campaign could get them killed.
Boko Haram has increased the number and deadliness of its attacks and this month has been closing in on Chibok, threatening to attack again, according to community leaders.
Last week Boko Haram fighters took control of Damboa town, strategically located at a crossroads about 20 kilometers (12 miles) from Chibok, and the National Emergency Management Agency said Monday more than 15,000 people from the town and nearby villages are on the run.
The government response to the mass abduction has been plagued by politics from the start. First lady Patience Jonathan charged the kidnappings were fabricated by her husband’s enemies to damage his image.
She also had two leading activists briefly arrested, and relations between the government, security services and the (hash)BringBackOurGirls movement have been tense ever since.
On Monday, leading campaigner Oby Ezekwesili, a former education minister, posted on Twitter that her passport was briefly seized by state intelligence agents as she tried to board a flight to London from Abuja.
Jonathan has never before met with the parents or the escaped girls, though he insists repeatedly that “My priority is the return of these girls.” In May, he cancelled a planned trip to Chibok without explanation.

(AP)
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