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Missing Chibok Schoolgirl Calls Her Father by FarukuWadata12(m): 10:19pm On Apr 12, 2016 |
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.
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
Borno State 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.
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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 (AI) 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.
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 the missing girls the day
after the abduction, finding scarves
and other items along a trail until
heavy rain forced them back.
Nkeki then organised 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.
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 criticised 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 Cameroun.
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. |
Re: Missing Chibok Schoolgirl Calls Her Father by thesicilian: 10:34pm On Apr 12, 2016 |
Story for the gods |
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