By Oby Ezekwesili
Today marks 136 days since April 14,
when 219 daughters of Nigeria were taken captive from our midst at close to
midnight while we all slept. The Presidential Facts Finding Committee on Chibok
Abduction which was set up evidently to validate to those who doubted the
tragedy, helped confirm that our daughters that went to acquire knowledge were
forcibly taken by terrorists.
In all, the report stated that 276
school girls were abducted from Government Secondary School on that fateful
night and that fortunately, 57 of them courageously took the risk of
self-rescue and are since reunited with their families.
After many weeks of tentativeness
arising from indifference, doubt, visible irritation and buck passing a rescue
effort was finally launched by the Federal Government, supported by countries
that include the United States, Britain, France, China, Canada, Israel and
Australia.
However, after four months and with
no news of their rescue nor any slimmer of evidence of actions being taken to
bring them back, the desperate reaction of all who empathise with the girls and
their families has become “where is the result from the rescue effort?”
For some others, despondent and yet
willing to hold on to the tiniest ray of Hope, the demand is that the Federal
Government offers Nigeria the whole truth on the matter of their rescue effort.
Why so? There have been too many discordant and contradictory information on
the status of the rescue of the girls by our government.
Those who ask for the truth,
therefore do so mindful of the need to not compromise intricacies of
operational strategy while yet insisting that our government can act and convey
with sincerity a series of confidence inspiring measures it is taking to
resolve this massive scale of human tragedy. Like we say in life, parents and
other citizens would rather be slapped with the truth than be kissed with lies.
There are after all three well known
options that are possible in the rescue of abduction victims- first, military
action, second, negotiation/dialogue which may be direct or indirect and third,
a mix of both military action and negotiation. Anyone who has mapped and
analysed all the statements ever made by our Government since we were informed
by the Chief of Defence Staff on May 24 that they had located our girls cannot
but wonder what to believe.
In the quest for truth it does not help that when
the dots are connected drawing from diverse statements made by our government
at various times dismissing each of the options for one reason or the other,
nothing tangible remains. Could it be that the evident complexity of their
rescue has led to inertia or paralysis that surely portends grave danger to our
#ChibokGirls …our daughters? Could this be the reason many more people now
think we should be silent, move on and allow “whatever” is being done about
their rescue to “quietly” continue? If it is then there is no better
response to give than than “Not without our daughters”.
For, indeed, the 219 girls of Chibok are our daughters. Anyone who is a true parent and real human being would admit that it is almost impossible not to think of the fate of these girls in personal terms. It is impossible not to think how deep their agony would be should children sired in their loins or carried in their wombs be experience what these innocent young women are suffering.
Most of the empathetic gestures
given to their cause have been framed especially the women advocates who are
mothers, as being simple acts of humanity because they do see the faces of
their own daughters whenever they look at the picture faces of the abducted
girls.
They knew they had to lend a voice
to their cause once they started seeing and connecting to them not just as
pieces of news from some remote region of the country or the world, but as
flesh and blood that could have been their own daughters. These are the women
and men who today out of deep empathy continue to stand and to speak for our
girls even after the rest of the world moved on to other issues buffeting our
troubled world.
The second resonant point of convergence
for those who advocate for the cause of the girls is the sadness that all
things considered, these girls are merely victims of a society that failed
them. Our Chibok girls are victims in every sense of the word; suffering
serious injury for no fault of their own.
The sad but true reason our
ChibokGirls continue to languish in the den of our common enemies more than
four months after their abduction is that many among us see their vicissitude
as one of those tragedies similar to what others have suffered in our country.
The known fact is that in the fifty
four years of our independence, too many of our citizens have been victims of
our nation suffering all kinds of tragedies and situations alone. Victims
abounded in events leading up to, during and after the Nigerian civil war. Did
we care? No, we simply moved on. We created another set of victims during the
decades of military rule. Did we care? No, we again moved on. In the last
fifteen years of our nascent democracy 1999 transition, we have kept on
creating victims. Have we cared? Not really, we have to move on.
Within the last four years that
bloody insurgents have launched a most vicious attack against our
citizens, abducting, maiming and killing in thousands, have we really cared?
Not really. Those it does not affect may not even give a passing thought to the
victims just like it was in the past.
So, are we just going to keep moving
on for as long as each tragedy does not affect us, ignoring the new sets of
victims of our nation to “take care of their own pain?” I have seen, heard and
known how our society victimizes the victim.
Can a people survive and sustain
this manner of distribution of suffering in which the strong at any given point
disregards the pain of the victim? No. A society where everyone carries the
wound of having once been a victim that was abandoned to suffer alone can
neither last nor achieve greatness.
How then can we not see that there is something about the present travail of our Chibok Girls that presents us the best opportunity opportunity to awaken our deadened souls that have since our coming together missed out on the wholesome value of empathy? How can we not see that the only and true victims in this abduction saga are our 219 daughters of Nigeria?
How then can we not see that there is something about the present travail of our Chibok Girls that presents us the best opportunity opportunity to awaken our deadened souls that have since our coming together missed out on the wholesome value of empathy? How can we not see that the only and true victims in this abduction saga are our 219 daughters of Nigeria?
How can we possibly move on without
daughters? We must not move. We must give everything possible to save them.
They can become the symbol of our catharsis – our purging – our cleaning from
the accumulated toxin of bitterness and wound spread across our country from
all manner of tragedies and injustice of the past.
By all agreeing not to move on
without our daughters, we make a statement that as a people, we are determined
to confront our common enemy together. By refusing to sacrifice our daughters
that we can save, we send the strongest signal to our common enemies that our
society will fight to defend our humane values and the right to life of our
children, our women, our men, our young and our old regardless of their
religion, politics, language and culture.
By staying determined to stand with
our endangered ChibokGirls, we as Nigerians would measure up to the standard of
Ghandi’s words that “The True Measure of Any Society can be found in how it
treats its most vulnerable members”
If we all did everything possible to bring back our daughters from the clutches and den of evil erected by our common enemies within our own territory; our ChibokGirls will become a historical break from our shameful past as an uncaring society if people.
If we all did everything possible to bring back our daughters from the clutches and den of evil erected by our common enemies within our own territory; our ChibokGirls will become a historical break from our shameful past as an uncaring society if people.
It will be a statement of a united people of the
kind we see every day we gather for their cause at the Unity Fountain and
loudly declare that “we are from Chibok”- regardless of our ethnic,
political, religious, ideological persuasion.
When we do so, it is not because we
are unaware of past and other present victims. It is that our daughters are in
a special category of being alive and can be saved. It is a protest against the
idea that the suffering of other people does not matter and can therefore be
denied, ignored and even mocked. It is a kick against the lack of empathy that
reflects in the poor choices over several decades that have stagnated and kept
us as a tottering country that never evolved into a nation.
History teaches and
research validates that when a country of diverse people evolve into a nation,
the probability of achieving development that benefits the largest number is
significantly higher.
The combination of these two
factors- daughters and victims should imprint on the mind of everyone that we
could all be the biological parents of children who due to no fault of their
own became victims of deadly danger.
As one very involved with the formation
and leadership of the #BringBackOurGirls advocacy that is championing the
citizens advocacy for the rescue of our Daughters, the two factors steadfastly
give me perspective regardless of what other people may think or say.
Personally, I have advocated for our
ChibokGirls since the 15th April when news of their abduction broke. On the
23rd April a demand one made to have everyone at the UNESCO event inaugurating
Port Harcourt as the 2014 World Book Capital stand in solidarity and demand
their rescue resulted in our social media hashtag #BringBackOurGirls.
The march
for them on the 30th April inspired by Hadiza Bala Usman and the daily
“sit-out” in Abuja by incredibly sacrificial Nigerians who are there even today
for the 120 such gathering is a testament to the irony of the divine quality of
our suffering Chibok Daughter.
These days, when members of our movement are taunted with questions like “when will you realise the futility of your advocacy and stop?” Like typical Nigerian, we have learnt to answer questions of this sort with some simple questions.
These days, when members of our movement are taunted with questions like “when will you realise the futility of your advocacy and stop?” Like typical Nigerian, we have learnt to answer questions of this sort with some simple questions.
Interestingly, one question to which not even the irredeemably
heartless have ever been able to answer without shame is “Did 219 girls also
willingly offer themselves to be denied their freedom and their lives?” If they
did not, why then should we make victims out of children who already are
victims? “Would you say want us to stop if any of them were your
daughter?”
We cannot afford to move on without our daughters. Everyone who can raise a voice to compel action for them should really do so without feeling embarrassed. Everyone who has the power to act decisively and quickly to rescue must not consider them a secondary priority. The three possible options of rescue are narrowed and clear to all.
We cannot afford to move on without our daughters. Everyone who can raise a voice to compel action for them should really do so without feeling embarrassed. Everyone who has the power to act decisively and quickly to rescue must not consider them a secondary priority. The three possible options of rescue are narrowed and clear to all.
Until our Federal Government
demonstrates that our ChibokGirls are not being abandoned by showing that it is
taking any of the three and that we shall no longer move on and forsake victims
of our society as we during the fifty four years of history-there will always
be voices; if even just one demanding that our daughters must be rescued from
our enemies.
So, when next time you hear that chant or read that chant
#BringBackOurGirls and ever go on to ask “when will you stop.?” there are two
answers you can be sure of “#UntilOurGirlsAreBackAndAlive and better of the
two, #NotWithoutOurDaughters!

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