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Op- Ed from young Global leaders of the World Economic Forum: Goodluck: where are you?

January 14th 2015

Goodluck: where are you?

Dear President,

On behalf of all of the signatories below, I would like to express our deep concern about the recent situations in Nigeria.

In the last weeks, extremists killed innocent people in an attack that was unprecedented in its impact. No, I am not speaking of the tragic shootings at the offices of French Magazine Charlie Hebdo where militant extremists killed 12 people but I am speaking of Baga, a small town in Borno State in Nigeria, our country, where Boko Haram, another group of militant extremists, massacred up to 2000 innocent people.

What is stunning about the two incidents is that while the world rose to condemn the killings in Paris, the massacre in Baga, the most deadly so far in Boko Haram’s four-year insurgency, has been largely greeted by silence. Most disturbing still for us, is that while Nigeria’s president was able to send a message to France condemning the killings, he has yet to address the Nigerian people who look to him for leadership.

What can account for the silence of Nigeria’s president? Unfortunately, it would not be the first time. It was 40 days after the abduction of the schoolgirls in Chibok before our President addressed the country about the incident. In the intervening weeks, it seemed that there was a question in the government about whether the abduction had even taken place.

The delay has been tragic in its impact: of the 276 girls abducted, the 52 who have since secured their freedom escaped on their own. The rest are still in captivity, still waiting to be rescued, 276 days after the abduction took place.

Connecting the abduction of the Chibok girls to the Baga massacre, one wonders if there could be some question about whether the Baga massacre occurred? Amnesty’s report confirmed that the attack took place and that “up to 2000 people may have been killed.” It seems that the army is contesting the numbers, suggesting that it was 150 people that were killed.

Whether 150 or 2000, it would be important to hear from the government on its efforts to secure the region, to bear witness to the loss of lives in Baga. Instead, there is a deafening silence. We have seen a clear incompetency in handling matters. In the context of existing ethnic and religious fault lines, silence only communicates the impression that Nigeria’s government does not care about the victims and is not dealing with the insurgency.

Ultimately, the real problem is the seeming inability of the global community to maintain pressure on a government that seems ambivalent about fulfilling its constitutional role of securing the lives and properties of its citizens. You, as our president, after all have a responsibility to speak out.

As 1.5 million Nigerians flee their homes, swelling camps within Nigeria and overwhelming border communities in neighbouring countries, perhaps the only hope for effective pressure on the Nigerian state is global outcry for the state to act. It was such global outcry that finally forced the President to address the nation and the world 40 days after the April 2014 Chibok abductions. It was said outcry that caused Nigeria’s government to reach out to other countries and, with the help of France and the UK, agree a plan for a regional security force to secure porous borders between Nigeria, Niger and Chad which unsecured enable Boko Haram to move around the four countries with ease.

Perhaps, had that global focus on the crisis been sustained, the multi-regional force would have been based in Baga as had been planned. Perhaps they would have been enough to repel Boko Haram when the sect attacked on January 3rd. Perhaps 2000 lives could have been saved.

But ISIS happened. And in the way that things do, the world moved on. The agreed regional force was not at the base in Baga, leaving a small national military unit standing between thousands of armed militants and a town of ten thousand people.

Not surprisingly, the insurgents quickly routed the Nigerian army unit stationed at the base. And up to 2000 people died. Two thousand people, mainly women, children and aged, who could not flee quickly enough, are dead.

Their bodies are still strewn around the forest and river where they died. If their deaths do not gain the world’s attention, do not generate the outcry and actions that they should, we only prepare the ground for more killings and abductions. We can put a stop to these unnecessary killings Mr President, We can!!

We can bring back our girls and boys who have been abducted by Boko Haram. But first we must decide if the lives of people in Nigeria matter or not.

Break the silence, Mr, President. Call for global attention and support to avert a crisis that begins to echo the early days of the Rwandan genocide. The world said ‘never again,’ then. Remind them of their pledge and be the voice for the thousands of innocent people who have died and the millions who yearn for peace to rebuild their communities and to claim their place in the unfolding rise of the continent.

Hafsat Abiola-Costello
Founder/President Kudirat Initiative for democracy
Nigeria

Co-Signatories

Arnaud Ventura, France
Bjarte Reve, Norway
Binta Niambi Brown, USA
Erik Charas, Mozambique
Funmi Iyanda, Nigeria
Georgie Bernadette, USA
Jacqueline Musiitwa, Zambia
Loulwa Bakr, Saudi Arabia
Leo Shlesinger, Chile
Marieme Jamme, Senegal
Mark Turrell, Germany
Rossana Figuera, USA
Salim Amin, Kenya
Soulaima Gourani, Denmark
Susan Mashibe, Tanzania
Tara Fela Durotoye, Nigeria

 

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