Global campaign #bringbackourgirls involving celebrities including U.S. First Lady Michelle Obama calling for them to be found blazed around the globe |
When Dauda Yama retrieved
his mobile phone from a neighbour's house in January this year, he noticed a
missed call from his daughter Saratu who had been missing for almost two years.
Thomson
Reuters Foundation report continues:
The
last time he spoke with Saratu was on April 14, 2014, when she rang to say men
from the Islamist group Boko Haram had loaded her and her classmates from the
Government Girls' Secondary School in Chibok in northeast Nigeria onto trucks.
Attempts
to reach her again failed and two years on, 219 girls abducted that night
remain missing, despite a global campaign #bringbackourgirls involving
celebrities and U.S. first lady Michelle Obama calling for them to be found.
The
students are among an estimated 2,000 girls and boys abducted by the Boko Haram
since the start of 2014, with many of those abducted used as sex slaves,
fighters and even suicide bombers, according to an Amnesty International
report.
But
when Yama returned the missed call that evening, a man answered. Yama hung up
and rushed to the home of Yakubu Nkeki, chairman of the Association of Parents
of the Abducted Girls from Chibok.
"He
asked me what he should do," Nkeki, 58, a schoolteacher, whose 17-year-old
adopted daughter Maimuna Yakubu Usman is among those missing, told the Thomson
Reuters Foundation.
Nkeki
took the phone and redialled the number that was again answered by a man who
said the phone belonged to his wife.
Reporting
the matter to any of the armed personnel around Chibok was out of the question
so instead they informed a campaigner with the Bring Back Our Girls group,
which advocates the return of the missing girls "now and alive".
"We
don't know who to trust," said Nkeki who has received physical threats for
his efforts to keep the abduction of the Chibok girls in the headlines and the
government's sights with the abduction becoming a political issue for Nigerian
leaders.
TOOK
THE LEAD
Providing
counsel to parents of the missing Chibok girls is part of Nkeki's role as
chairman of the association. He also checks up on the parents to see if they
need help at all.
"I
check if they have food items or if someone is seriously sick," he said.
"If there is any issue, I call the committee members."
Some
months ago, for example, the association received a donation of 128 bags of
corn from a missionary group. The association decided to give three bags to one
parent to sell and raise money for medicine for his son who was bitten by a
snake.
Nkeki
said he had not intended to become a leader for the parents but was catapulted
into the role when he tried to rally families into action after the abduction.
Under
his lead, and frustrated by a lack of official action, the parents formed a
team to search the Sambisa forest for missing girls the day after the
abduction, finding scarves and other items along a trail until heavy rain
forced them back.
Nkeki
then organized a meeting of parents in his village of Mbalala, calling for a
peaceful demonstration and seeking media coverage to get the word out, with his
initiatives prompting the parents to appoint him as their leader.
It
was Nkeki's efforts that ascertained exactly how many girls were missing after
the school said the Boko Haram had razed all records. He cycled from village to
village for two weeks with pen and paper to build a register.
"I
got the names of the girls, their pictures. I asked for proof. They showed me
their daughters' books so that I could get the exact name the girl used in the
secondary school," he said.
His
census revealed the number of girls abducted was 276 but 57 were able to escape
as the trucks took off and came home.
NOT
WELCOME
But
the attempts to rally parents were not always welcome.
Nkeki
said some parents refused to have anything to do with the parents association
and he has been harassed and arrested by armed forces personnel, displeased
with his media appearances and efforts to keep the missing Chibok girls in the
news.
Former
Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan was criticized for his slow reaction to
the Chibok kidnappings, which was seen by some as indicative of his response to
Boko Haram, which at its strongest held large swathes of northeastern Nigeria.
President
Muhammadu Buhari, who defeated Jonathan in an election last year, ordered a new
investigation into the abductions in January.
"My
family is afraid for me. Even my uncle's wife whose daughter was abducted, the
one I adopted, said to me that she does not want to lose her daughter and then
also lose me," said Nkeki.
But
despite Nkeki's efforts, his daughter and the other girls are still missing,
with the parents desperate for any leads that could help locate their
daughters.
Hopes
were raised earlier this month when a suspected female suicide bomber who
claimed to be one of the missing Chibok girls was arrested in northern
Cameroon.
But
official investigations revealed the 12-year-old girl was not from Chibok but
abducted from Bama in northeastern Nigeria by Boko Haram a year ago.
Nkeki
and Yama dialled Saratu's number a few more times after the initial success but
the line repeatedly went dead. However, Nkeki says it rang when Yama tried
again in February.
"The man warned him
never to call his wife's number again. He said if he is not careful, he will
lose his life," he said.
Five Facts About
Nigeria's Missing Chibok Schoolgirls #BringBackOurGirls
Thomson
Reuters Foundation reports that two years ago the world was in uproar over the
abduction of more than 200 schoolgirls by the Islamist militant group Boko
Haram from a secondary school in Chibok in northeastern Nigeria.
Under
the hashtag #bringbackourgirls, politicians, celebrities and the public
globally united to demand the return of the girls who disappeared without a
trace.
Two
years later, and after several false leads, the girls are still missing.
Here
are five key facts about the Chibok schoolgirls:
1.
On April 14, 2014, Boko Haram militants kidnapped 276 school girls, mostly aged
between 16 and 18, from a secondary school in Chibok in Borno State, northeast
Nigeria. About 50 of the girls escaped but 219 were captured.
2.
Nigeria's government and military faced heavy criticism for their handling of
the incident, with towns and cities across the nation witnessing protests.
President Goodluck Jonathan, who declined to comment on the kidnappings for
almost three weeks, was criticized, and became the first sitting Nigerian
president to lose an election, in 2015.
3.
The kidnappings prompted a strong social media reaction, with the phrase
#bringbackourgirls tweeted around 3.3 million times by mid-May 2014. U.S. first
lady Michelle Obama joined the campaign, as did Malala Yousafzai, the Pakistani
schoolgirl shot by the Taliban after campaigning for girls' education.
4.
Hope for the girls was briefly raised in April, 2015, when the Nigerian
military announced it had rescued 200 girls and 93 women from the Sambisa
forest. It was later revealed that the Chibok girls were not among them.
5. About 2,000 girls and
boys have been kidnapped by Boko Haram since the beginning of 2014, according
to Amnesty International, which says they are used as cooks, sex slaves,
fighters and even suicide bombers.
No comments:
Post a Comment