These trending
hashtags on Twitter represent the widespread anguish of many Nigerian citizens following
the abduction of hundreds of secondary school girls in Chibok, Borno State. Abducted
by suspected Boko Haram insurgent fighters since April 14, 2014, the
whereabouts of these young girls remain unknown. Latest reports suggest that
they may have been ferried across the border and forced to marry the Islamic insurgents.
The military search and rescue efforts has made scant progress ever since localized
forest searches by local hunters, community volunteers and grieving parents armed with cutlasses,
bows and arrows equally failed.
The
disappearance of the school girls provoked national and international outrage, triggering
protests across the country; fiery campaigns and powerful conversations across
diverse social media platforms. In Spaces for Change Discussion Forum, no day
passes without 10-20 different online postings including moderated discussions
generating hundreds and thousands of commentaries on the rising state of
insecurity across the country, particularly in the North Eastern part of the
country where insurgency has continued to jeopardize the realization of the
right to education for young school girls. Majority of the posts interrogate
the security infrastructure of the Nigerian state, with primary focus skewed on
the prospects of developing appropriate strategic and tactical responses to the
disastrous setbacks in the battlefields.
“ThisBoat is Sinking”, an April 22, 2014 article authored by Spaces for
Change.S4C’s executive director, Ms. Victoria Ohaeri which went viral on the
internet raised important issues surrounding the handling of the search and
rescue efforts; asked critical questions regarding the official documentation of
the missing school girls and proffered recommendations for stemming the tide of
insecurity across the country. She wrote:
“Depending on the sources you have
been reading, no less than 200 Nigerian school girls are trapped in some
extremely dangerous Boko Haram-controlled forests in Borno State. Eight days
after their abduction, the fate of these young girls remains unknown. Serial
rape, sexual slavery and killing of abducted young girls are common place…Till
this day, there is no accurate data of the number of missing school girls. All
the national dailies report fluctuating figures – 234, 230, 188, 79, 100, 270,
280 and what have you, reducing the victims to mere figures instead of human
beings desperate to return home to their parents and loved ones.
EIGHT DAYS AFTER, not a single
message of concern has been heard from the ministries of education, youth,
women affairs and the farcical office of the first lady! The relevant
ministries that ought to spearhead the search and lead the campaign for safe
return of the school girls have maintained a deafening silence. EIGHT DAYS
AFTER, the plethora of federal and state government agencies that corner more
than 70% of the annual budget to themselves communicate no known strategy or
action plan for gathering accurate data of missing, displaced, wounded and
disappeared persons. Without shame or guilt of underperformance on their part,
both the state and federal government agencies now totally rely on the foreign
media and external NGOs to assist them with routine data-gathering. What a
slide!
Beyond the duplication and recycling
of press statements with traditional swiftness condemning the violence in
strong terms, private sector organizations now need to understand the limits of
what the public sector can do to mitigate and respond to security emergencies
and terrorist-linked disasters. This means that it is becoming increasingly
apparent that the Nigerian military alone cannot meet the continually growing
security challenges and now more than ever, needs the support of the private
citizens and corporate sector to assist with preparedness, mitigation and
response interventions. In this regard, multinational corporations and
corporate players can no longer continue to watch from a distance. In other
words, corporate social responsibility initiatives must now move away from
white-washing old classroom blocks to donating part of their fat security
budgets and advanced security infrastructure to national emergencies”.
No comments:
Post a Comment