A MEMBER of the United States House of Representatives, Hon.
Frederica Wilson (D, Florida) has said that Nigerians and indeed the
mass media, should henceforth, put more pressure on their overpaid
elected representatives at the national and state assemblies to find the
missing 219 Chibok girls and end the Boko Haram insurgency.
Apparently angry about what she saw as a gross dereliction of
representation by members of the National Assembly in Nigeria, the
Congresswoman told The Guardian that Nigerian citizens should look in
the direction of the people “they stood in the sun for several hours to
elect” to evolve strategies to find the missing girls and end the
scourge called Boko Haram.
Wilson, who returned from Nigeria last Wednesday on the insurgency
challenge mission, gave the charge at the weekend at a symposium
organised on the Chibok girls by the National Association of Black
Journalists in the United States, which will end its annual convention
today in Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States.
According to Representative Wilson who was resplendent in a red
blazer and tomato-red hat outfit popularised by the BringBackOurGirls
campaigners in Nigeria: “Yes, you need to put pressure on the elected
representatives. They make a quarter of a million dollars in a year. We
don’t make that at the Congress!
“The people of Nigeria need to tell them: ‘We didn’t elect you to
stand by and allow Boko Haram to take over. We elected you to come
together to fight Boko Haram, to do what you can to fund and train the
military to fight Boko Haram and to find the girls…”
In a passionate tone, she told The Guardian after the panel
discussion moderated by CNN’s Michaela Pereira: “You can’t hold America
to fight the fire for you. You should hold the elected representatives
to fight the fire. Tell them, we elected you to find homes and places
for the thousands of displaced people. There are thousands and thousands
of internally displaced people that have to be resettled.”
Wilson told The Guardian further what parliamentarians should do in a
representative democracy, apart from law making in the chambers:
“The citizens have to tell the elected representatives, this is a
democracy. If you want to be a democracy, you have to act as a
democracy. Tell them there are thousands and thousands of people that
have been displaced by Boko Haram. They don’t have places to go. What
are your representatives doing about that?
The Congresswoman, who said she would return to Nigeria soon to train
some people on the art of holding the people to act as a democracy,
said she would join others in the United States on August 27 when the
abducted Chibok girls would clock about 500 days in captivity.
The lawmaker who assisted in getting U.S. study visa for 10 Chibok
girls who escaped from the insurgents after the April 2014 abduction
disclosed to The Guardian that she was pleasantly concerned that the
girls who jumped the Boko Haram trucks and escaped and many other girls
from the area are hungry for education.
Her words: “They want an education. They want to go to school. We
have Americans who don’t want to go to school. But these girls want to
go to school. They have a worth. They have a future. They cannot be held
captive…”
She said it was gratifying to note that a Nigerian community in
Miami, Florida is trying to help in the education of the children. The
10 Chibok girls are in the United States high school courtesy of a
non-governmental organisation, “Education Must Continue Initiative,”
formed by a Nigerian lawyer at the Georgetown University in Virginia,
Mr. Emmanuel Ogebe.
Ogebe brought one of the 10 girls, simply addressed as ‘Joy’, to the
black journalists’ programme. The girl who narrated how she and three
others escaped from their captors said she would like to be a physician.
“I would like to read to be a Doctor,” she told the audience.
Representative Wilson in response to another question said she has
been involved because: “First I am a mother. I was a school principal.
So I am convinced that education is the key to everything. Education is
the key to fighting poverty, education is critical to healthcare,
criminal justice system…”
She said it was painful that some of the Chibok girls’ fathers have
died of heart attack while waiting for the return of their daughters.
“They want to hear that their daughters are alive when we meet them.
But we can’t say that even as we tell them, ‘don’t give up’. We too
won’t give up. We will continue with education of those that escaped. I
feel that if you get education, you can make it in life.”
The Congresswoman said she had some impressions from recent
developments and attitude of Nigeria’s current President Muhammadu
Buhari that something more concrete would be done about the girls and
the fight against Boko Haram.
Her words: “He (the president) came to the United States and I met
with him. And I went to Nigeria on the issue and returned only this
Wednesday. I met him and he said he would do something. Former President
Jonathan didn’t meet people to give assurance like that. We have heard
some intelligence from local sources in Nigeria and even in the United
States that something concrete would happen. But we can’t give any
assurance to anybody…”
The panel discussion, which involved Joy (surname and location
withheld), featured Emmanuel Ogebe, Vladimir Duthiers, former CNN West
Africa Bureau Chief in Lagos now with CBS News, U.S.), John Yearwood,
Miami Herald and International Press Foundation and U.S. Representative,
Frederica Wilson.
Chibok girl admitted to U.S. university
Meanwhile, after an 11-month sojourn in the U.S., one of the escaped
Chibok girls currently schooling there has secured admission to a
university.
Speaking exclusively to The Guardian during the convention, guardian
of the 10 Chibok girls who relocated to the U.S., Ogebe, said this was a
“major and unexpected breakthrough.”
Ogebe, a human rights lawyer and director of ‘Education Must Continue
Initiative,’ said during a special session of the NABJ on the abducted
Chibok girls, that after meeting some of the escaped girls in Abuja, he
was moved by their plight and concerned about their safety.
He said upon returning to the U.S., he worked hard to obtain
continuing academic opportunities for them as the girls were fearful of
further attacks by Boko Haram if they returned to school.
At the colloquium, Duthiers recalled that part of the challenges of
covering Nigeria’s dreaded Boko Haram and indeed trailing the missing
girls included the fact that “government and the military authorities
had not been “ transparent about helping journalists to access the
area.”
He said Nigeria is the giant of Africa “with massive connection to
the U.S” but agreed with Yearwood that “it is not the most transparent
in the world”
On his part, Yearwood, a chieftain of International Press Foundation,
noted that part of the fundamental challenge was that even the wife of
former President Goodluck Jonathan had denied initially that there was a
kidnap in Chibok, saying “it was a wicked rumour”.
Yearwood said it was paradoxical that Nigeria which is richer than
some Gulf states cannot find evidence of oil wealth and so, lack of
transparency in the system and indeed the military, might have affected
management of the missing girls saga.
But Ogebe wondered why the U.S would deny Nigeria the chance to buy
arms “since government is not asking for grant or gift of arms.
“That way, the U.S is making the job of tackling insurgency difficult for President Buhari that just visited them”,
The Guardian observed that many African Americans in the hall could not
control themselves as they shed tears while Joy was narrating her gory
tale, especially when she aptly thanked everybody that came and have
been supporting and prayed that God would remember their labour of love.
‘How we escaped from our captors in April 2014’
During the panel discussion, Joy narrated her story of abduction and escape on April 14, 2014.
“They kept us under a tree and asked us to say our last prayers. Some of us were crying and some were praying.”
Then, their Boko Haram abductors said those who wanted to live should
get into the trucks and those who wanted to die should remain under the
tree.
As they rode in the open truck, Joy recalls that a tree branch
injured one of her classmates on the leg. She had to straddle her in her
arms as the girl wept and the terrorists ordered her to shut up.
At this point one girl came up with the suggestion to jump out of the
moving truck and some of them began to do so. But Joy, unfortunately,
could not due to the injured girl she was attending to.
She finally got her chance when their vehicle broke down and they were forced to camp in the Sambisa forest.
“I asked them if I could go to the toilet, but they refused twice.
Finally, I disguised myself a little and took three girls with me to
ask again. This time they agreed,” a confident Joy recalled of her
experience that night when she was just 17 years old.
“As we squatted pretending as though we were easing ourselves, I told the other girls I was not going back, that we must run.
One girl asked what if they killed us. I told them God will help us and we started running.”
‘I have 10 girls now who call me Dad’
Congresswoman Wilson said that as a former school principal the
abduction, which Ogebe called “the longest running mass abduction in
contemporary history,” touched her deeply and she vowed never to forget
the girls.
Ogebe urged the spell-bound audience to “be the change they want to
see in the world,” saying when he and the congresswoman first met Joy in
Abuja 14 months ago, little did he know that one day, all the three of
them would be sitting together in a panel in the U.S. He added: “I don’t
have a hash-tag but I have 10 girls now who call me ‘Dad’.”
Quoting a Nigerian proverb, Ogebe said: “Until the lion learns to
tell its story, the tale that will be told is that of the glorious
hunter. We need to value our lives and give our own narrative. These
girls valued their lives and made a decision to jump. Joy is a true
heroine who saved three others.”
Ogebe who called on corporate and religious organisations and people
of goodwill in Nigeria to help support the 10 Chibok girls as they
prepare to resume for the next academic year, told The Guardian
exclusively that there is still no fund to guarantee their continued
education in the United States.
“We have received no support from institutional donors – government
or otherwise. It’s been a purely private effort. Although we reached out
to Borno State, Federal Government, Victim Support Fund and Safe School
Initiative, no help has come.
“It is not too much for MTN, Zenith Bank, Oando, Glo, Living Faith,
Dangote, TY and others to adopt and sponsor one Chibok girl for one of
the five years required to complete their education.
I can confidently tell you that Americans rallied together to assist
the orphans of the 911 attacks in New York so I don’t see why Nigerians
cannot rally and support our Chibok Girls who are now world famous.”
Ogebe stated that ability to secure funding for the Chibok girl who
gained university admission will determine whether she moves ahead or
remains in high school with the others.
His words: “The girl that gained admission has really done remarkably
well since she came less than a year ago. She is so articulate when
speaking English that it would be unfair for her to lose another year
after the terrorists disrupted their lives last year.
“I believe it should be an inspiration to the world and to the others
if she can make it into an American higher institution of learning. We
don’t know what has become of the 219 girls in the hands of the
terrorists but we do know what could become of these escaped Chibok
girls if the resources are available. An example is Joy who wants to
become a doctor and return to help rebuild the devastated Northeast.”
Ogebe said interested people can contribute to Education Must
Continue Initiative, which was formed a year ago in response to Boko
Haram’s assault on education in Nigeria, by giving to EMCI’s which has
an account for this in a Nigerian bank.
“EMCI was created by concerned Nigerians, many of whom are themselves
victims of Boko Haram helping other victims. It has volunteers in Yola,
Jos, Abuja and the United States,” he said.
Source: Guardianngr
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