Chibok Girls Rescue: Just 21? Not impressed!
Rescued Chibok Girls |
Nigerians, especially the ruling
political class and their backers within and outside the country were in a
virtual state of euphoria about a week ago when Boko Haram eventually released
21 out of over 200 girls to the government. This is more than two and a half
years after their obviously well planned and articulated kidnap by the
terrorist Boko Haram and their collaborators within the Nigerian establishment
and security forces.
No true nation would allow such a
crass and brazen assault on its sovereignty by psychologically challenged bunch
of criminals such as Boko Haram. It
appears as if Boko Haram was deliberately allowed to flourish. Even today, while the government claims Boko
Haram has been technically defeated, they seem to tenuously rise from defeat to
cause havoc. The help of the so-called international community is also suspect,
because none of our major "helpers" would allow the travesty of Boko
Haram for a month on their territories, while Nigeria has battled a nebulous
enemy for nearly a decade with no end in sight.
The largely Christian Chibok girls
were kidnapped on school property, at night, in a part of the country that was
under military emergency. The kidnappers needed information as to the precise
location of the girls and obviously got it. They also had to cover some
distance to get to the school and make good their escape. They accomplished all
these fits except for a few girls who luckily managed to escape. And for nearly
three years, the misgovernance of Nigeria, the inefficiency of its security
forces and the duplicity of internal as well as external collaborators has been
on display. A security agency that was
able to organize "sting" operations against hapless Judges was unable
to locate or "sting out" the Chibok girls, or provide any coherent
strategy for liberating them. In saner climes, it would have been virtually
impossible to pull the Chibok stunt. And should it happen, those girls would be
located within 24 hours or less and rescued. Where do you go with nearly 300 abducted
girls in Britain, France or even Ghana for example?
As a country, we appear not to
have any prestige or honor to defend or protect. We are content to allow the
destruction of our people and have our sovereignty impugned because of our
internal contradictions and an ill-defined national philosophy. Sometime back, Israel
went to war over the abduction and killing of three of its teenagers. And the
United States started a media and political blitz against the workings of the Italian
justice system over an obviously flawed young woman's possible involvement in the
murder of her roommate in Italy. In contrast, Nigeria and Nigerians have
watched helplessly, for nearly a decade, the extermination of over 20,000 of
its citizens and the rendering of countless others as refugees.
The rescue of 21 kidnapped girls
out of over 200 (probably a thousand more unreported), after nearly three years
of abduction is a less than stellar performance for a nation that spends so
much on defense. Our Generals tend to
have large girths but little hearts: they have huge mansions but little compassion
or patriotism. When given the opportunity, many are ready to screw the nation
over instead of stretching their necks out to defend it. Boko Haram and its
antics is a clear indication of the worth of Nigerian lives and the sovereignty
of the Nigerian state.
The negotiations to release the
girls after these years; no matter how it was achieved, is a clear confirmation
to Nigerians that when trapped in the "valley of the shadow of death"
a citizen's life is not considered sacred but negotiable or expendable.
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