Civilian JTF |
…We don’t
know about it – Police
Officials of the Youth
Vigilantes, popularly known as the Civilian JTF (CJTF), yesterday called on the
Nigeria Police (NP) to redeem its 2014 pledge of ₦50 million reward to
anyone with information that could lead to the rescue of abducted Chibok schoolgirls.
Daily
Trust report continues:
The
call was made following the discovery of one of the girls, Amina Ali Nkeki, 19,
by members of the group in Damboa Local Government Area of Borno State on
Tuesday.
Amina
was found with a baby on the outskirts of a Boko Haram stronghold in the
Sambisa Forest two years after the 276 schoolgirls were taken away from their
dormitories in Government Girls Secondary School Chibok.
A
total of 57 girls escaped their captors as they were being ferried to the
Sambisa Forest in trucks.
After
the abduction, the police announced the mouthwatering sum as reward for any
help that could lead to their whereabouts.
In
a statement, the then Force Public Relations Officer (FPRO), Mr Frank Mba,
urged “patriotic citizens” to provide “useful information” to the police
through some dedicated phone numbers, promising to treat them with “utmost
confidentiality.”
According
to the statement, “The Nigeria Police hereby announce a cash reward of ₦50
million to anyone who volunteers credible information that will lead to the
location and rescue of the female students abducted from Government Girls
Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State.”
“The
Force urges all patriotic citizens with useful information to contact the
following numbers: 09-2914649 08081777309 08055547536 08032125050 08034617591
08035969731. While calling on the general public to be part of the solution to
the present security challenge, the Police High Command also reassures all
citizens that any information given would be treated anonymously and with
utmost confidentiality,” it added.
The
whereabouts of the remaining 219 girls had remained an enigma, until Tuesday’s
discovery of Amina alongside her four-month-old daughter.
Based
on this, the legal adviser of the CJTF, Barrister Jibrin Gunda, told our
correspondent in a telephone interview yesterday, that this is the time for the
police authorities to fulfill the pledge in order to set a good precedence.
“We
feel we should remind the police that the promise is sacred. There is no
denying the fact that it is our gallant operatives, the youth vigilantes, who
rescued Amina Ali from the hands of the Boko Haram.
“This
feat is worth celebrating because the whole world, including the USA, Britain,
France and other allies worked closely with the Nigerian security forces in
order to locate the missing girls but to no avail. However, our boys, with just
sticks and bows and arrows traced one of them.
“We
are, therefore appealing to the Nigeria Police to fulfill its promise and
release the ₦50 million,” he said.
Barrister
Gunda, who described the CJTF as “unsung heroes” said they had paid their dues
to deserve recognition from the federal government.
“Between
2013 and now, we have lost over 600 of our members to the Boko Haram. They died
while confronting the miscreants.
“Many
of those that died have wives, children and parents. They need to be
supported,” he said.
He
also called on President Muhammadu Buhari to consider the CJTF in the
federal government’s youth empowerment initiatives.
“I’m
of the opinion that without the sacrifice and dedication of our youths, the
fight against the Boko Haram would have been something else. It’s our youth
that know the train and because of the fact that they were born and brought up
around Borno, they easily identify Boko Haram insurgents.
“Similarly,
in the course of the fight, they work closely with the Nigerian security
forces. However, when it comes to sharing credits for bravery, our boys are
more often forgotten,” he said.
Another
official of the CJTF, who does not want to be named, said Amina was found after
their personnel on stop-and-search duty at Talala checkpoint in Damboa Local
Government Area of Borno State, intercepted the father of her baby.
He
said a thorough interrogation led to a check on his wife, who was later
discovered to be one of the 219 missing Chibok girls.
“The
Civilian JTF member, who recognided Amina Ali by just one look at her is from
Baalle community. I won’t just tell his name until the promised reward is
released,” he said.
However, when contacted over the pledge, the spokesperson of the police, Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP) Olabisi Kolawole, said she was not aware of it.
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