Categories: News

6-Month Missing Girls Anniversary: Ralliers Are Stopped from Protesting, Malala Urges Gov. To Not Forget Girls

Police officers block #BringBackOurGirls campaigners in Abuja from marching on the president’s official residence, on the six-month anniversary of the abduction of more than 200 schoolgirls. Photograph: Pius Utomi Ekpei/AFP/Getty Images

On the six-month anniversary of the missing schoolgirls of Chibok being kidnapped by Boko Haram, #BringBackOurGirls ralliers (pictured above) were stopped from marching near the president’s grounds in protest and Pakastani girls education activist and Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai (pictured) called for concerned citizens and activists to raise their voices “louder than ever” for the girls, reports the BBC.

RELATED: Undeterred, #BringBackOurGirls Call for Global Week of Action

On Tuesday, droves of Nigerian citizens and campaigners set to keep the issue of the missing girls in the forefront of the government’s mind with their protests. Unfortunately, police prevented ralliers fom getting near their intended destination.

#BringBackOurGirls organiser Maureen Kabrik told the press the challenges they met on their marching route, “We’re here. We’re a civil group. We’re not a disobedient group. Yet, they stopped us with heavy arms.”

Distraught Mother Hannatu Daudu spoke to the press about the loss of her daughter Saratu who called her and her husband shortly after the kidnapping happened.

“When she called, we were all lying in the compound. She said: ‘Some people have come to take us and they have rounded us up. Please pray for us’. And then her father and the rest of us kept praying,” Dauda recalls.

“After some minutes she called again to say: ‘Daddy they have taken all of us from school. We have been loaded onto a truck and we don’t know where they are taking us to. Please tell my mummy to forgive me until we meet again.'”

“We are in a desperate situation. Sometimes, when we go to the farm and remember what has happened we just start crying and can’t work.”

A Clarion Call for Action

In July, Yousafzai paid a three-day visit to Nigerian President Goodluck during her 17th birthday, demanding that he meet with some of the escaped girls and grief-stricken parents.

While President Jonathan eventually met with a small group about a week later, he had not accepted to meet with any of his citizens who have been directly affected by Boko Haram’s incessant attacks previously.

Nearly 300 girls were kidnapped on April 14th. And while the mass abduction prompted a worldwide outcry for the girls to be returned home, as the days have turned into weeks and the weeks have turned into months, the momentum of the #BringBackOurGirls movement on the ground has lost some of its momentum.

This fact caused Malala to post the following statement on her site:

Six months after the Boko Haram kidnapping of 273 Nigerian school girls, we must raise our voices again and louder than ever to demand that the more than 200 girls still in captivity be freed, reunited with their families, and receive a quality and safe education. I urge the Nigerian government and the international community to re-double their efforts to bring a quick and peaceful conclusion to this crisis. #BringBackOurGirls

 

Malala also reposted the following video of her April visit to Nigeria:

<iframe width=”560″ height=”315″ src=”//www.youtube.com/embed/uUMZo_F26QM” frameborder=”0″ allowfullscreen></iframe>

RELATED: Nigerian President Fails To Mention Missing Girls in Independence Speech, Citizens Storm Capital in Protest

 

Abena Agyeman-Fisher

Abena Agyeman-Fisher is the Editor-in-Chief of Face2Face Africa. Most recently, she worked for Interactive One as the Senior Editor of NewsOne, she worked for AOL as the News Programming Manager of Black Voices, which later became HuffPo Black Voices, and for the New York Times Company as an Associate Health Editor. Abena, a Spelman College graduate, has been published in Al Jazeera, the Daily Beast, New Jersey’s The Star-Ledger, the Grio, BlackVoices, West Orange Patch, About.com, the Source, Vibe, Vibe Vixen, Jane, and Upscale Magazines. She has interviewed top celebrities, icons, and politicians, such as First Lady Michelle Obama, Senior Advisor to the President Valerie Jarrett, Civil Rights activist and diplomat Andrew Young, comedian Bill Cosby, Grammy Award-winning singer Jill Scott, actress and singer Queen Latifah, Olympic Gold winner Cullen Jones, international supermodel Alek Wek, and five-division world champion boxer Floyd Mayweather. Most recently, she served as the First Lady’s press reporter during President Barack Obama’s U.S.-Africa Summit, Young African Leaders Institute event, and the 2013 presidential trip to Senegal, Johannesburg, Cape Town, and Tanzania. Abena is also a 2015 International Women's Media Foundation Africa Great Lakes Fellow, where she reported on women candidates and Chinese sweatshops in Tanzania for CNN and Refinery29.

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