The Senate on Thursday summoned the
National Security Adviser and all the service chiefs to brief it at a
closed session on their efforts so far to recover the abducted Chibok
schoolgirls.
Also, the House of Representatives on
Thursday asked the Federal Government to set a target for security
agencies to rescue the 219 Chibok schoolgirls held in captivity by Boko
Haram insurgents.
The Speaker, House of Representatives,
Mr. Yakubu Dogara, gave the position of the House after an exhaustive
debate on a motion to mark the second anniversary of the abduction of
the girls.
The red chamber did not, however, give
any date on when the service chiefs would appear before it but
observed a one-minute silence in honour of parents of the abducted girls
that had died.
The senators took the decision
following the deliberation on a motion moved by the Senator representing
Kogi West Senatorial District, Dino Melaye, tagged, “The Abduction of
Chibok School Girls- Two years after.”
Melaye lamented the plight of the girls
and their parents, saying the Federal Government could not be said to
have succeeded until the girls were rescued.
He said, “We cannot succeed as a
government until those girls are released. Getting back the over 200
Chibok schoolgirls into the society is important and a must for our
security agencies.
“The abduction of over 200 girls by Boko
Haram has wrongly affected us as a people as could be seen in the
international condemnation of the government’s slow reaction to this
unprecedented outrage committed against Nigerian womanhood.
“Never before has such criminal viciousness been perpetrated on Nigerian womanhood.”
Other senators who supported the motion
called on the Federal Government to go beyond the yearly ritual of
celebrating the anniversary of the abduction.
They called on the government to explore every available avenue to ensure that the girls were rescued.
The Senate also commended the BringBackOurGirls group for what they described as its doggedness and consistency in the campaign for the release of the girls.
The upper chamber which said it
empathised with parents of the girls, also charged security agencies to
ensure the girls’ freedom, just as it urged the Borno State Government
to rebuild the Chibok Secondary School in the interest of students in
the community.
Adopting the prayers of the motion, the
Senate mandated security agencies to do everything possible to ensure
the release of the girls.
The Senate Minority Leader, Senator
Godswill Akpabio, however, introduced humour into the entire scenario by
accusing the sponsor of the motion, Melaye, of using the campaign for
the release of the Chibok girls to win election to the Senate.
Akpabio said, “I wonder why those who
led protests against the government of former President Goodluck
Jonathan to rescue the girls have suddenly kept mum.
“I remember in 2014, Dino Melaye used to
wear a T-shirt and he led the protest to ensure that the abducted
schoolgirls were released. He was always at the National Fountain to
lead a protest against the government.
“He eventually cashed in on it and won elections. Other people in the APC did the same thing.”
On its part, the House of
Representatives resolved to send a “high-powered delegation” to Chibok
to commiserate with the parents and relatives of the girls as a way of
passing the message that the legislature shared in their pains.
The motion on “The Need to Intensify the
Search and Rescue of the Chibok School Girls”, was moved by the All
Progressives Congress member representing Damboa/Chibok Federal
Constituency of Borno State, Mrs. Asabe Bashir.
Dogara stated that searching for the
girls had reached a point where government must set a target on when to
rescue the girls to underscore the urgency of the situation.
“A time has come for us as an institution to insist that the executive should set targets for the rescue of the girls.
“We have to set targets so that we don’t lose the sense of urgency that is required to free the girls,” Dogara added.
He particularly commended members of the BBOG campaigners for keeping the fate of the girls on the front burner.
“We must also commend the security
forces of our country, who have been toiling day and night, searching
for these girls,” he said.
While moving her motion in an
emotion-laden voice, Bahir said a dark cloud had enveloped the world of
the parents of the girls, two years on, without a word of assurance on
how they would re-connect with their loved ones.
“The plea is that the Federal Government should intensify the search for these girls.
“For two years, their whereabouts are unknown,” she reminded the House.
The Chairman, House Committee on Foreign
Relations, Nnena Ukeje, condemned the cowardly acts of the Boko Haram
insurgents, whom she said employed unconventional methods of fighting to
attack soft targets.
“Boko Haram should release the girls;
they are innocent. They should come out like men and fight our armed
forces in open battles. Kidnapping, raping girls and women are not the
rights of men,” the Peoples Democratic Party’s legislator from Abia
State added.
The Deputy House Minority Whip and
member of the PDP from Gombe State, Binta Maigeri, said her heart was
heavy for the girls and their parents because she could not bear the
horror of not knowing the whereabouts of her children for one night, let
alone for “730 nights.”
Another APC lawmaker from Bauchi State,
Mr. Mohammed Sani-Abdu, noted that the Chibok girls’ abduction exposed
Nigeria’s lack of seriousness as a country on how it treated the
welfare, security and safety of its citizenry.
“The Chibok incident is a major embarrassment for us and it portrays us as an unserious people.
“The girls and their parents are
innocent people, who do not deserve the torture and trauma they have
been made to face,” Sani-Abdu stated.
But, beyond Nigeria failing to rise to
the occasion, the lawmaker also blamed the failure to rescue the girls
on the claim that Western countries were unwilling to assist Nigeria.
Sani-Abdu observed that the US, in
particular, and Israel, had the requisite technologies to help Nigeria
in securing the release of the girls but were not responding positively
enough in spite of being Nigeria’s friends.
“What is the use of all the bilateral
treaties and other understanding that we have with these countries if
they cannot assist us in situations like this?”He asked.
But another APC member from Monguno, in
Borno State, Mr. Mohammed Monguno, informed the House that the girls
were already “scattered” in various locations in Nigeria, Chad, Niger
and Cameroon.
Monguno used to be one of the heaviest-hit towns in Borno State by Boko Haram before it was liberated by the Nigerian army.
The lawmaker suggested that Nigeria
should use the avenue of the Chad-Basin Commission to seek the
cooperation of neighbouring countries to intensify the search efforts.
“Local intelligence has shown that these girls are no longer kept in one place”, Monguno said.
Comments
Post a Comment