Finaly: Malala Convinces Jonathan to Meet Chibok Parents 3 Months after Kidnap

July 14, 2014

 by Talatu Usman

Three months after the failure of the Nigerian security system led to the kidnap of over 250 teenage girls by the Boko Haram insurgent group, President Goodluck Jonathan has finally agreed to meet with the parents of the victims.

The girls were kidnapped from the Government Secondary School, Chibok on April 14, about a year after the president declared a state of emergency in the state to curtail the Boko Haram insurgency.

About 217 of the girls are still with their kidnappers after others escaped from the insurgents.

While it took the president almost a month to speak publicly on the kidnap, he is yet to visit Chibok and is yet to meet with the parents of the teenagers, despite local and international condemnation of the government’s actions and inactions.

However, on Monday, Mr. Jonathan declared he would finally meet with the parents of the victims.

He also promised scholarships for all the abducted school girls in any part of the country when they return home.

The President stated these when he received Malala Yousafzai, a Pakistani school pupil and education activist from the town of Mingora.
Malala was shot by a Taliban gunman in 2012 for championing girl-child education and has been a promoter of the cause since she survived the attack.

Malala, who is in Nigeria on the commemoration of her 17th birthday, told journalists during a briefing after the meeting that Mr. Jonathan promised her that he would meet with the parents of the abducted girls as well as ensure that they are returned home safely.

Briefing journalists alongside the president’s spokesperson, Reuben Abati; her dad, Ziauddin Yousafzai; and the Director of Operations of Malala Foundation, Eason Jordan; the Pakistani teenager said she is in Nigeria to support girls’ education and advocate for the release of the Chibok girls.
July 14 is Malala Day, a day set aside by the United Nations for the world to focus on putting all girls in school.

She said she met with parents of some of the girls the previous day and they had expressed the longing to meet with the President and anybody who can help them find their girls.

“I am here in Nigeria on my 17th birthday for a price which is to see that every child goes to school,” Malala said. “This year, my objective is to speak up for my Nigerian sisters about 200 of them who are under the abduction of Boko Haram and I met the president, Goodluck Jonathan, for this purpose.”
“I convey the voice of my sisters who are out of school or who are still under the abduction of Boko haram. And for those girls who escaped from the abduction but still do not have education. And in the meeting, I highlighted the same issues which the girls and their parents told me in the past two days. The parents said they really want to meet with the president to share their stories with him. And I asked the president that if he wants to meet with the parents of the girls, the president assured me that he would meet with them,” she said.

She added that the parents of the girls “still have this hope that there is still someone who can help them. They asked me if there is any chance for them to meet the president because at this time, they need the president’s support. I am hopeful that these two promises, the return of the girls from Boko Haram and meeting with their parents, will be fulfilled and we will see it soon”.

Malala also told journalists that the Malala fund had raised $200,000 “and we want to use it to contribute to those children’s education. We have started working with two organisations here in Nigeria to be able to help these girls continue their education”.

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