Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,151,286 members, 7,811,855 topics. Date: Sunday, 28 April 2024 at 09:25 PM

Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial (6746 Views)

11 High-Profile Abductions Of Schoolchildren After Chibok Tragedy / Shocking Revelations Of Lagos #EndSARS Report - Punch Editorial / Why $30m Didn't Protect Nigerian Pupils After Chibok (2) (3) (4)

(1) (2) (Reply) (Go Down)

Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by ogododo: 9:38am On Apr 26, 2022
FOR the people of Chibok, it has been an unending nightmare. As they continue to relive the agony of the terrorist outrage that shot their rustic town and villages into global limelight eight years ago, their tormentors strike frequently. Terrorists identified with ISWAP, a breakaway faction of Boko Haram, attacked a village in the Chibok Local Government Area on April 19 during which they kidnapped three teenage girls. It is tragic that after the notorious mass abduction of 276 schoolgirls in 2014, the Nigerian government has failed to stop frequent attacks on the defenceless people by Islamist marauders.

Calamitously, the President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), has not been able to fulfil the solemn promise he made seven years ago to rescue all the girls. He and the military have also failed to protect the area against incessant attacks and kidnapping by the terrorists. The agony of the people can only imagined.

Recall that of the 276 initial abductees, 110 are still unaccounted for. Many who returned had had children for the fiends who kidnapped them and forcibly “married” them, disrupted their education and upturned their lives.  Amnesty International stated that the 110 returnee girls were reunited with their parents between 2016 and 2018 after a ransom of €3 million was paid by the Federal Government.

What saddens the people most is the inability of the government, and the security forces to protect Chibok from the continued torture.

Last week’s attack follows a pattern. In January, the Kibaku Area Development Association, an umbrella group of the people of Chibok LGA, disclosed that in the last 10 years, the area had endured 72 terrorist attacks. It said 407 residents were killed in the attacks, and that apart from the Chibok school girls, 332 others had been kidnapped. In addition, 20 churches had been burnt down, houses and business premises torches, vehicles stolen and farmland, harvests and barns destroyed. In one attack mid-January, 25 girls were captured out of which eight escaped, leaving 17 to be ferried away. A few days earlier, ISWAP gunmen had raided several communities in the area, killing four people and kidnapping 24 others.

The Chairman, Chibok LG, Umar Ibrahim, briefing the visiting governor of Borno, Babagana Zulum, said 73 houses, 33 shops and four churches were razed during several raids alongside 11 vehicles.

As KADA lamented, “Chibok has been for all intents and purposes abandoned to its own devices by all layers of government in Nigeria.” Its national president, Dauda Iliya, said the spate of attacks had increased since 2018 with frequent kidnappings of mostly girls. This is sad.

There should special arrangements made to secure Chibok, rescue all those in captivity, rehabilitate its people and rebuild it as an enviable haven of peace and progress. Neglecting it as the government has done hands the terrorists an undeserved victory. After the 2014 outrage when the Goodluck Jonathan administration not only failed to act on intelligence alert prior to the attack, but also shockingly failed to pursue the abductors for weeks after, Chibok was expected to be well fortified thereafter.

The succeeding Buhari regime, after initial military successes against the insurgents, appears to have abandoned Chibok community to its fate. No fewer than 20 parents of the kidnapped girls have died from health complications, disclosed Allen Manasseh of the Bring Back Our Girls advocacy group

Unfortunately, the continuing trauma of the Chibok parents is slipping from public consciousness. Obviously, it is no longer a priority for the Federal Government. This should change. Buhari should fulfil his promise and pursue the safe return of all the remaining Chibok girls and other abductees in the country by whatever means. In October 2020, the United States sent in commandos to rescue a single American, Philip Walton, held captive in the Nigeria-Niger Republic border. United Kingdom’s Special Boat Service commandos attempted to free one Briton and an Italian held hostage by terrorists in Sokoto in March 2012.

Nigeria’s intelligence and military forces should invest in and develop the capability for such special missions. If other countries can mobilise immense resources, traverse faraway places to rescue their nationals, it is inexcusable that Nigeria cannot rescue its citizens held on its own territory.

Since the Chibok 2014 attack, more than 1,500 school children – mostly schoolgirls – have been abducted and murdered in northern Nigeria said AI. UNICEF says that no fewer than 11,536 schools have been closed due to abductions of school children by terrorists in the North, disrupting the education of approximately 1.3 million Nigerian children in the 2020/2021 academic year.

Nigerian authorities should learn from how Rwanda – a country whose past genocide received as much global attention as Chibok – rebuilt its systems by prosecuting offenders, improving citizens’ access to education, providing equal opportunities for women and driving economic growth through investments in tourism, production and infrastructure.

The Federal Government should fortify Chibok; deploy more military personnel there to halt the continuous attacks on the community. The Borno State Government should pour resources into rebuilding Chibok town and area to an enviable height with infrastructure, schools, health facilities and promotion of businesses and investments. Zulum should set up a very effective, well-trained, armed, equipped local and state-wide vigilance corps, emphasising human and ICT-leveraged technology, including drones. Iraq’s federal, provincial and city governments are partnering with international agencies to rebuild Mosul after its devastation by the Islamic State that targets, among others, enabling 1.6 million people to regain access to essential public services.

There should be effective governance and provision of social services to deny terrorists a vacuum to fill. Zulum should act on the suggestion for N12 billion investments annually in the state’s terror-ravaged areas by partnering with the Federal Government, international agencies, donors and CSOs.

Pressure groups such as the BBOG should revive their advocacy and continue to hold the government’s feet to the fire until it rescues the remaining girls and secures Chibok.

https://punchng.com/eight-years-after-chibok-still-unsafe/

Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by ghettokid1(m): 9:39am On Apr 26, 2022
its a lie.. Chibok is now a safe heaven, baba have secured everywhere 4 us

13 Likes

Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by Nobody: 9:40am On Apr 26, 2022
Apc has played politics finish.

Pdp too messed up.

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by MadamVanessa(f): 9:43am On Apr 26, 2022
shocked




I thought Buhari the messiah came to rescue them from the clutches of Boko Haram. Buhari is the greatest scam of all time. Idiotic useless president

21 Likes

Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by doctorexcel: 9:46am On Apr 26, 2022
The tittle should have been 8 years later, chibok now more UNSAFE than before

9 Likes

Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by treesun: 10:12am On Apr 26, 2022
ogododo:
FOR the people of Chibok, it has been an unending nightmare. As they continue to relive the agony of the terrorist outrage that shot their rustic town and villages into global limelight eight years ago, their tormentors strike frequently. Terrorists identified with ISWAP, a breakaway faction of Boko Haram, attacked a village in the Chibok Local Government Area on April 19 during which they kidnapped three teenage girls. It is tragic that after the notorious mass abduction of 276 schoolgirls in 2014, the Nigerian government has failed to stop frequent attacks on the defenceless people by Islamist marauders.

Calamitously, the President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), has not been able to fulfil the solemn promise he made seven years ago to rescue all the girls. He and the military have also failed to protect the area against incessant attacks and kidnapping by the terrorists. The agony of the people can only imagined.

Recall that of the 276 initial abductees, 110 are still unaccounted for. Many who returned had had children for the fiends who kidnapped them and forcibly “married” them, disrupted their education and upturned their lives.  Amnesty International stated that the 110 returnee girls were reunited with their parents between 2016 and 2018 after a ransom of €3 million was paid by the Federal Government.

What saddens the people most is the inability of the government, and the security forces to protect Chibok from the continued torture.


Last week’s attack follows a pattern. In January, the Kibaku Area Development Association, an umbrella group of the people of Chibok LGA, disclosed that in the last 10 years, the area had endured 72 terrorist attacks. It said 407 residents were killed in the attacks, and that apart from the Chibok school girls, 332 others had been kidnapped. In addition, 20 churches had been burnt down, houses and business premises torches, vehicles stolen and farmland, harvests and barns destroyed. In one attack mid-January, 25 girls were captured out of which eight escaped, leaving 17 to be ferried away. A few days earlier, ISWAP gunmen had raided several communities in the area, killing four people and kidnapping 24 others.

The Chairman, Chibok LG, Umar Ibrahim, briefing the visiting governor of Borno, Babagana Zulum, said 73 houses, 33 shops and four churches were razed during several raids alongside 11 vehicles.

As KADA lamented, “Chibok has been for all intents and purposes abandoned to its own devices by all layers of government in Nigeria.” Its national president, Dauda Iliya, said the spate of attacks had increased since 2018 with frequent kidnappings of mostly girls. This is sad.

There should special arrangements made to secure Chibok, rescue all those in captivity, rehabilitate its people and rebuild it as an enviable haven of peace and progress. Neglecting it as the government has done hands the terrorists an undeserved victory. After the 2014 outrage when the Goodluck Jonathan administration not only failed to act on intelligence alert prior to the attack, but also shockingly failed to pursue the abductors for weeks after, Chibok was expected to be well fortified thereafter.

The succeeding Buhari regime, after initial military successes against the insurgents, appears to have abandoned Chibok community to its fate. No fewer than 20 parents of the kidnapped girls have died from health complications, disclosed Allen Manasseh of the Bring Back Our Girls advocacy group

Unfortunately, the continuing trauma of the Chibok parents is slipping from public consciousness. Obviously, it is no longer a priority for the Federal Government. This should change. Buhari should fulfil his promise and pursue the safe return of all the remaining Chibok girls and other abductees in the country by whatever means. In October 2020, the United States sent in commandos to rescue a single American, Philip Walton, held captive in the Nigeria-Niger Republic border. United Kingdom’s Special Boat Service commandos attempted to free one Briton and an Italian held hostage by terrorists in Sokoto in March 2012.


Nigeria’s intelligence and military forces should invest in and develop the capability for such special missions. If other countries can mobilise immense resources, traverse faraway places to rescue their nationals, it is inexcusable that Nigeria cannot rescue its citizens held on its own territory.

Since the Chibok 2014 attack, more than 1,500 school children – mostly schoolgirls – have been abducted and murdered in northern Nigeria said AI. UNICEF says that no fewer than 11,536 schools have been closed due to abductions of school children by terrorists in the North, disrupting the education of approximately 1.3 million Nigerian children in the 2020/2021 academic year.

Nigerian authorities should learn from how Rwanda – a country whose past genocide received as much global attention as Chibok – rebuilt its systems by prosecuting offenders, improving citizens’ access to education, providing equal opportunities for women and driving economic growth through investments in tourism, production and infrastructure.

The Federal Government should fortify Chibok; deploy more military personnel there to halt the continuous attacks on the community. The Borno State Government should pour resources into rebuilding Chibok town and area to an enviable height with infrastructure, schools, health facilities and promotion of businesses and investments. Zulum should set up a very effective, well-trained, armed, equipped local and state-wide vigilance corps, emphasising human and ICT-leveraged technology, including drones. Iraq’s federal, provincial and city governments are partnering with international agencies to rebuild Mosul after its devastation by the Islamic State that targets, among others, enabling 1.6 million people to regain access to essential public services.

There should be effective governance and provision of social services to deny terrorists a vacuum to fill. Zulum should act on the suggestion for N12 billion investments annually in the state’s terror-ravaged areas by partnering with the Federal Government, international agencies, donors and CSOs.

Pressure groups such as the BBOG should revive their advocacy and continue to hold the government’s feet to the fire until it rescues the remaining girls and secures Chibok.

https://punchng.com/eight-years-after-chibok-still-unsafe/


Is anywhere safe under General Buhari (Rtd)!

5 Likes

Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by ladensmith(m): 10:14am On Apr 26, 2022
Hmm
Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by gasparpisciotta: 10:18am On Apr 26, 2022
Buhari failed Nigeria on security
Osinbajo failed on economy

14 Likes

Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by ogododo: 12:14pm On Apr 26, 2022
gasparpisciotta:
Buhari failed Nigeria on security
Osinbajo failed on economy
Bubu go handle security, Pastor go work economy,
Lalasticlala.

13 Likes

Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by gasparpisciotta: 12:16pm On Apr 26, 2022
ogododo:

Bubu go handle security, Pastor go work economy,
Lalasticlala.

Both failed woefully

5 Likes

Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by youngreezy(m): 2:20pm On Apr 26, 2022
Mere looking at buhari,you go know say em no know anything, buhari dey too dumb for nigeria na why country cast like this,how can a stark illiterate rule a country? person wey no fit comprehend common sentence...but my problem na nigerians wey still dey support this men them, poverty don turn many nigerians to hungry zombies na why I dey pray make God no allow me poor for this life

9 Likes

Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by Downey(f): 2:21pm On Apr 26, 2022
How do we know that?
Many many fake news has popup after the incident.
Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by datopaper(m): 2:21pm On Apr 26, 2022
Where are we heading to, as a nation. Another election 2023 is coming.

Same of the same are coming together. Among the hopeful candidates, who are new comers?

I believe a saying "it is our collective fault"

If my people can think and do something about it.

6 Likes 1 Share

Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by tellsblinks(m): 2:21pm On Apr 26, 2022
What did the innocent girls ever do wrong??

And this life is only once. Chaiii sad

4 Likes

Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by IKBARUTEN11(m): 2:21pm On Apr 26, 2022
Nowhere is safe in naija now.

From the terrorists' torn north to the ipob/esn ravaged South, the story is the same.
Chibok is unsafe
Awka is unsafe
Ogun is unsafe
Oyo is unsafe


We only survive by God's grace in naija

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by Johnkennie(m): 2:21pm On Apr 26, 2022
Haa
Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by Nobody: 2:21pm On Apr 26, 2022
And y’all still want Tinubu to continue the mantle
We’re truly finished

5 Likes

Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by stano2(m): 2:22pm On Apr 26, 2022
Corruption has killed this country
Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by PrimePerfect(m): 2:22pm On Apr 26, 2022
"Calamitously, the President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), has not been able to fulfil the solemn promise he made seven years ago to rescue all the girls. He and the military have also failed to protect the area against incessant attacks and kidnapping by the terrorists. The agony of the people can only imagined"...

What a disappointment....

4 Likes

Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by Rosaline5000: 2:23pm On Apr 26, 2022
Very sad
Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by WibusJaga: 2:23pm On Apr 26, 2022

2 Likes

Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by Cmanforall: 2:23pm On Apr 26, 2022
Election season

Those girls might even be having contacts with their families
Can playing politics with human lives in Nigeria please be stopped?
Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by walozanga(m): 2:24pm On Apr 26, 2022
Na still dsame idiots that campaigned with it want to rub u people of 2023. They playd game with young peoples life because of power. The next move will bring death to all their zoombies

3 Likes

Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by Parashooter: 2:24pm On Apr 26, 2022
APC government promised to rescue those girls but they only succeeded in disappointing millions of Nigerians undecided...Nigerians await them as election draw close

APC really dealt with BBOG group that one would understood that the pic below isn't meant to be used in Nigeria

3 Likes

Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by bigdammyj: 2:25pm On Apr 26, 2022
Noted
Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by DropsMic(m): 2:27pm On Apr 26, 2022
Normal
Re: Eight Years After, Chibok Still Unsafe - Punch Editorial by DropsMic(m): 2:28pm On Apr 26, 2022
Rihag:
God have mercy on Nigeria
Continue deceiving yourself

2 Likes

(1) (2) (Reply)

Lagos Sensitizes Nigerians On Railway Safety / Oyo Is Difficult To Govern – Ajimobi / Daily Mail Of England Turned Nigerians From Victims Into Muderers

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 43
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.