Chibok girls are now celebrities o, anyway this is really good if it will bring them back.....wife of the President of the United States of America,
Michelle Obama, has joined the global campaign to rescue the over 200
Chibok schoolgirls kidnapped by Boko Haram on 14 April, 2014.
Michelle
joined the social media campaign, tweeting a picture of herself holding
a piece of paper with the message #BringBackOurGirls.
he joined the campaign on the heels of her husband’s desire to offer assistance to Nigeria to rescue the missing girls.
US President Barack Obama has condemned the abductions as “outrageous” and “heartbreaking”.
Also, joining the campaign is Malala Yousafzai, the Pakistani schoolgirl who survived a shooting by Taliban insurgents.
She said the world must not stay silent over the abduction of the Nigerian girls.
She told the BBC that “if we remain silent then this will spread, this will happen more and more and more.”
Malala was shot in the head in 2012 for campaigning for girls’ education.
The
16-year-old survived after months of surgery and rehabilitation in the
UK, and is now a vocal campaigner for girls’ access to education
worldwide.
Describing the Nigerian girls as her
“sisters” who are “in a prison”, Malala said that the only way to stop
similar abductions happening in future was to speak out.
She
described Boko Haram as a group of extremists who did not understand
that Islam said believers had a duty to educate themselves, and be
tolerant and kind towards others.
Former UN chief Kofi
Annan, also appealed for action. He criticised both the Nigerian
government and other African nations for not reacting faster to the
kidnapping, and called on them to use whatever was at their disposal to
help free the girls.
He said security forces should be used to free the kidnapped girls.
The
abduction of the girls has overshadowed the World Economic Forum which
opened in the Nigerian city of Abuja on Wednesday evening.
The
US, UK, and France have despatched teams of experts to Nigeria to help
recover the girls. Other nations such as Canada, Spain, China and Kenya
have offered to help Nigeria rescue the girls.
Boko
Haram has been accused of carrying out another attack in Borno State on
Monday, in which some 300 people are reported to have died.
Residents
said that gunmen went on the rampage in Gamboru Ngala after spreading a
rumour that the abducted girls had been spotted elsewhere, prompting
security forces to leave the town.
Boko Haram’s leader,
Abubakar Shekau, admitted earlier this week that his fighters had
abducted the girls – who are mostly aged between 16 and 18 and were
taking their final year exams – from their school in the town of Chibok
on 14 April.
Shekau threatened to “sell” the students,
saying they should not have been in school in the first place, but
rather should get married.
Another 11 girls were kidnapped on Sunday night after two villages were attacked near the militants’ forest hideout.
The abductions have prompted widespread criticism of the Nigerian government and demonstrations countrywide.
Nigeria’s
police on Wednesday offered a $300,000 (£180,000) reward to anyone who
can help locate and rescue the schoolgirls, but some are asking why it
has taken this long for such a move to be taken.
Chinese
Premier Li Keqiang, in Nigeria for the World Economic Forum, offered to
provide help from his country’s satellite and intelligence services.
Boko
Haram, whose name means “Western education is forbidden” in the local
Hausa language, began its insurgency in 2009. An estimated 1,000 people
have died in the violence and security crackdown this year alone.
we will find them soon, what do you think?
No comments:
Post a Comment