Speaking
to newsmen, the executive director of Spaces for Change, Ms. Victoria
Ibezim-Ohaeri, stated that the Nigerian government has failed to live up to its
primary obligations of protecting lives and property. More than two weeks after
hundreds of school girls were abducted, the Nigerian government is yet to
publish the accurate data of the missing girls. The plethora of
federal and state government agencies that corner more than 70% of the annual
budget to themselves have not come up with any known strategy or action plan
for gathering accurate data of the number 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.
Beyond finding these girls, the government needs to tell
us what it is doing to ensure the abduction of young school girls do not
reoccur in the future. Finding these girls is not meaningful if they would be
merely taken back to Chibok, where they are vulnerable to further attacks and
re-abductions. The federal government must guarantee human security in Borno
communities. In the meantime, the Nigerian government must take immediate steps
to provide alternative education hubs in less volatile locations where these
young girls can go to school and fully realize their potentials.
She further noted that the three major factors
fuelling the crisis in the North East are: the uncertainty of the perpetrators,
the uncertainty of prosecution and the uncertainty of justice. Finding these
girls is imperative, but identifying the abductors of these young girls and
ensuring that they are punished will demonstrate that the government is indeed
serious about entrenching accountability in the fight against terrorism.
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