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FINALLY, JONATHAN TO MEET CHIBOK GIRLS’ PARENTS

naijalog by naijalog
July 14, 2014
in Top Stories
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FINALLY, JONATHAN TO MEET CHIBOK GIRLS’ PARENTS
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President Jonathan has revealed he plans to meet  parents of the missing Chibok girls within the next 24 hours.

He disclosed this at a session with visiting child education activist Malala Yousafzai, at Aso Rock Villa.

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Seven of the parents of the missing schoolgirls from Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State are said to have died as a result of the trauma associated with the abduction of their children, in April.

Yousafzai is currently in the country to support girl-child education and drum up support for the release of the Chibok schoolgirls in commemoration of Malala Day ─ the day set aside by the United Nations for global attention on girl-child education.

Though, President Jonathan has promised to give scholarship to all the missing girls when they are eventually freed, he has not visited Chibok or met with the parents of the missing girls.

‎Malala told journalists after the meeting that her foundation had raised $200,000 in support of the education of the abducted girls on their return. ‎She said: “I am here in Nigeria on my 17th birthday for a price which is to see that every child goes to school.

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 conveyed 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 if he wants to meet with the parents of the girls, the president assured me that he would meet with them. “I spoke to the president about the girls who complain that they cannot go to school despite the fact that they want to become doctors, engineers and teachers.

But the government is not providing them any facility. They also need health facility, security, and the government is not doing anything.

“These are the issues I presented to the president today. And the president fortunately promised me that he will do something for these girls and he promised me that the girls under the abduction of Boko Haram will be released as soon as possible. This is the promise the president made and I am hopeful that his promise will come through and we will soon see those girls return soon. “

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.

Even though the promises have been made, it does not mean I am going to stop talking. I will be counting days and I will be looking when those girls are going to be returning home. “I can’t stop this campaign until I see those girls return back to their families and continue the agitation.

This is the position of the Malala foundation. My father and I and the entire family want to speak out for those 10.5 million children who are out of school. They have no access to education because of many problems. And I am hopeful that the international community will take serious action because if we think this country is in Africa and is not going to affect other countries, we are really wrong.

“If we leave 10.5 million children illiterate, these children can become terrorists, they can be violated and they can be deprived of their basic human rights, at the end they will not be able to help their country in developing. So if we want the whole world to be successful, it is important that every child should go to school.

Unfortunately, in Nigeria, only 1.5% of the budget is spent on education which is a small amount compared to Pakistan which has increased its own to 4%. “Money spent on education should definitely be increased. This is how this country is going to be developed and i believe in the power of education. If Nigeria must have a bright future, every child must have an opportunity to go to school.”

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