President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan said Monday in
Abuja that the notion that the Federal Government has not been doing enough to
find and rescue the abducted Chibok girls, is very wrong and misplaced.
Speaking at an audience with Malala Yousafzai, the
Pakistani Girl-Child Education Campaigner, President Jonathan said that the
Federal Government was definitely doing everything possible to ensure that the
girls were rescued alive and safely returned to their parents.
He however explained to Malala, who was accompanied
by her father and other members of her Foundation, that the Federal
Government’s efforts were constrained by the overriding imperative of ensuring
that the girls’ lives are not endangered in any rescue attempt.
“Terror is relatively new here and dealing with it
has its challenges. The great challenge in rescuing the Chibok girls is the
need to ensure that they are rescued alive,” President Jonathan said, stressing
that the Federal Government and its security agencies were very mindful of the
need to avoid the scenario in rescue attempts in other parts of the world where
lives of abductees were lost in the effort to rescue them.
The President said that this challenge
notwithstanding, the Federal Government was very actively pursuing all feasible
options to achieve the safe return of the abducted girls.
“The time it is taking to achieve that objective is
not a question of the competence of the Nigerian Government. We have had teams
from the United States, Britain, France, Israel and other friendly nations
working with us here on the rescue effort and they all appreciate the
challenges and the need to thread carefully to achieve our purpose," he
said.
The President told Malala who met yesterday with
some parents of the abducted girls that he fully empathized with their pain and
anguish. He said that he would meet with the parents himself before they left
Abuja to personally comfort them and reassure them that the Federal Government
was doing all within its powers to rescue their daughters.
President Jonathan reiterated his Administration’s
commitment to ensuring the safe and proper education of all Nigerian children.
“I personally believe that since about 50 per cent
of our population are female, we will be depriving ourselves of half of our
available human resources if we fail to educate our girls adequately or
suppress their ambitions in any way. We are therefore taking steps to curb all
forms of discrimination against girls and women, and have also undertaken many
affirmative actions on their behalf,” President Jonathan said.
The President said that the Federal Government was
also proactively evolving and implementing policies and measures that will
benefit the abducted Chibok girls when they are safely rescued, as well as
others that have been adversely affected by the Boko Haram insurgency.
These, President Jonathan said, included the
establishment of a Victims’ Support Fund, the Safe Schools Initiative and the
Presidential Initiative for the North East.
He announced that he would inaugurate a National
Committee to oversee fundraising for the Victims’ Support Fund, which will also
cater for families of security men and women who have lost their lives in the
war against terrorism, on Wednesday, July 16, 2014.
The President thanked Malala for coming to Nigeria
to support ongoing efforts to rescue the abducted Chibok girls and promote
girl-child education.
“We appreciate your efforts to change the world
positively through your powerful advocacy for girl-child education,” President
Jonathan told her.
Reuben Abati
Special Adviser to the President
(Media & Publicity)
July 14, 2014
But come to think of it, are those girls really still in the bush since then?
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