Mandela’s wife, Graca Machel, writes abducted Chibok girls, urges government action
Category: World News
Nelson Mandela’s widow, Graca Machel, broke the traditional mourning
period of her husband this week to deliver a message to the 276 abducted
Chibok school girls, assuring them and their parents of the prayers of
every African parent, and reminding the Nigerian government of its key
responsibility of securing its citizens.
Ms. Machel said she stood
amongst the parents of the kidnapped girls “holding hands, in pain and
anguish; in solidarity”, in a stirring letter she sent out Tuesday.
“We
send them waves of love and comfort, to warm their hearts and dry their
tears. We pray for them and look forward to the day when they will
embrace their parents and families at home,” she wrote.
“We send
them waves of energy to keep their inner selves strong and resilient.
When the dark night in the forest is overwhelming, they must lift their
eyes to the sky. The stars are watching over them.
They must not lose
hope and they must not succumb to fear and despair, even in the most
adverse of circumstances they find themselves in.”
The nearly 300
girls were kidnapped by Islamist extremists Boko Haram, on April 14 from
a government school in Chibok, a remote community in Borno State,
northeast Nigeria.
There are fresh reports the girls initially
thought to be held in the notorious Sambisa forest, were being moved to
another jungle in Gombe State.
An international effort led by the
United States, United Kingdom and France is underway to help locate and
rescue the girls nearly a month after their abduction.
The foreign
team is to assist the Nigerian security forces that have so far failed
in rescuing the girls, with surveillance, intelligence and satellite
capabilities.
The attack, one amongst several by Boko Haram, has
shocked the world sparking calls for action against the group. The group
has killed thousands in a five-year-old insurgency.
The Nigerian
government has come under intense scrutiny over its handling of the
kidnapping after it took more than two weeks to respond to the raid.
President
Goodluck Jonathan was in Kano State for a political rally a day after
the attack which occurred same day as a car bomb that killed at least 75
people in Abuja. Boko Haram also claimed responsibility for that
attack.
Mr. Jonathan has said the abduction of the school girls is the “beginning of end” of Boko Haram.
In
a tone that appears also critical of the government’s effort against
the insurgents, Ms. Machel said the Nigerian government must do
everything in its power to locate all the girls, make sure they are
safe, and bring them back home.
“It is government’s first and foremost responsibility to protect its citizens, and keep them safe,” she said.
She also encouraged the international community to act.
“If
the world can mobilize all the means possible to search for a plane
carrying 239 passengers, certainly it can also mobilize the means to
find our girls. They deserve nothing less,” she said.
“We want to
see the same resolve, commitment and focus from the Nigerian government,
African governments and of course those governments who have the
capacity and resources to save our girls.
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