Former
Senate Majority leader, Mohammed Ali Ndume, has called on the Federal Government
to initiate regular public briefings on the efforts to rescue the remaining 112
Chibok girls in Boko Haram captivity.
Senator
Ndume made the call yesterday in Abuja while speaking on the seventh
anniversary of the kidnap incident marked on Wednesday, April 14.
Over
200 schoolgirls were kidnapped from Government Secondary School, Chibok town,
Borno State on April 14, 2014. While over 100 of them were rescued at different
times, 112 still remain missing.
Ndume said:
“It is seven years since the Chibok girls were abducted. Up till today, 112 of
them are not accounted for. We hear stories but I am glad that the government
issued a statement that they have not forgotten and that they are following the
case.
“But I want
to call on the government to be giving the parents and the public update either
on monthly or quarterly basis on the efforts they are making so that we will
know what is going on.”
He
stated that the Federal Government should identify the parents of the remaining
112 missing girls so that through the Borno State government or any other
channel, it could be in touch with them and also assist them psychologically.
Ndume
further called on the Federal Government to allow the Borno State government to
rebuild the destroyed Chibok school where the girls were kidnapped and to
deliver other necessary infrastructure in the area.
“The
Federal Government, up till now, seven years after the school was destroyed,
that school has not been rebuilt after the Federal Government took over and the
Safe School Initiative where money was set aside – big money – nobody is
talking about that. The Federal Government has not fulfilled its promise.
“In
fact, the state government is now struggling to take back the school from the
Federal Government in order to rebuild it. And then, there is a critical road
that facilitated the running away of these (Chibok) girls – the
40-kilometre-long road between Chibok and Damboa. It has been in the Federal
Government’s budget since I came to the National Assembly 18 years now. The
Federal Government could not finish it and that road is a critical access
because if there is no accessibility, the military or the security agencies
cannot be effective.
“So,
these are the things we are calling on the Federal Government to look into as a
matter of urgency or national importance because the issue of Chibok girls and
the issue of Chibok itself and the parents of the girls stick in the mind of
not only Nigerians but also the international community. The earlier the
Federal Government does something in terms of providing more information as to
the efforts that they are making, the better for all of us,” Ndume added.
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