Until
now, I didn’t believe any representative of the Nigerian government would raise
their voice during a conversation with parents of the missing Chibok
schoolgirls. Government exists to protect life and property, and, where it
fails as in the case of the Chibok schoolgirls, it should, at least, feel
guilty.
I thought no Nigerian leader could look the distraught parents in the face and
still speak words that hurt. On Thursday “Mama
Taraba” Aisha Alhassan told the Chibok parents during a meeting in Aso Villa.
Here were agonizing parents transported from Chibok by the #BringBackOurGirls
(BBOG) movement to receive consolation from the powers that be. Here were
parents expecting the presidency to tell them when to expect their long lost
daughters.
The presence of Hajiya Alhassan, who is also Nigeria’s minister of women
affairs, must have reassured them that there was a mother who would protect
their interests. How then could Alhassan, a mother and grandmother who is still
hoping to be awarded the governorship of Taraba State, have spat on their
faces? “Mama Taraba”, first, told the grieving parents they were not invited to
the villa.
Then, she reportedly told them that the girls were not kidnapped under the current
government, “so why are you harassing us?”
As if the diatribe was not enough, Minister Alhassan reminded them: “You wanted
schools, you wanted hospitals, you wanted this and that… you wanted so many
things.” BBOG leader Oby Ezekwesili was said to have rebuked Alhassan for not
being sensitive to the parents’ feelings. But did the minister show any
remorse?
Not likely. A group named Taraba Women for Democracy Network had to issue a
statement expressing shock and calling on all Taraba women to rise against the
woman “who wants to be our first female governor” for acting like “a typical
Jezebel with wickedness and callousness towards these poor parents who
travelled all the way from Askira Uba to Abuja”.
Up until the time of this writing, I have not heard that “Mama Taraba” has
apologised for the alleged insult or replied the women’s group from Taraba.
Does it, therefore, mean that she uttered those words in the presence of
parents whose daughters had been missing for almost two years? Not many can live
by the philosophy of the parents of the 219 Chibok schoolgirls.
I can’t imagine how I could have stayed alive for 21 months (God forbid!)
without my daughter and still wait to be told stories. Some of the girls’
parents have died already. But, were I one of them, I would have been the first
to be reported dead. From the minute I received the news, I would not eat or drink
until I saw my daughter.
I would have raced to Sambisa Forest, perhaps alone, and fought the terrorists
until I dropped dead. So, I really applaud the parents who have been attending
meetings with and listening to overfed government officials. And how much more,
when they listened to a minister pouring insult on their traumatised souls!
While the parents must have reached the lowest depth of despair by now, the
nation might have turned the Chibok disaster into a comic affair. President
Buhari, for his part, told the parents that he did not know where the girls
were.
He promised to constitute a panel that would investigate the circumstances of
the kidnap. Hugh? Was Alhassan speaking for the presidency also? Nobody should
be blamed for expressing doubts about Chibok anymore. President Goodluck
Jonathan initially didn’t believe the kidnap story was true.
Later, he and other government officials kept saying they knew where the girls
were and promising to rescue them. Twenty-one months after, another president
is seeking an inquiry into the affair. Doesn’t someone smell a rat?
One theory that gained ground shortly after the abduction was that it was a
hoax organised by politicians to blackmail the government of President Jonathan
in an election year. A fortnight after the Chibok story broke, a woman (not
“Mama Taraba”) asked some probing questions. PDP woman leader Kema Chikwe, at a
prayer session for “the security and peace of the nation” on April 30, 2014,
asked:
“How did it happen? Who saw it happen? Who did not see it happen? Who is behind
this?” The same Chikwe praying for the kidnap victims was later described as
insensitive for asking those simple questions. When, a columnist asked at the
time, did we start accepting every statement as a dogma that must not be
questioned? As it appears, Chikwe has not been alone. Perhaps Alhassan too had
viewed the Chibok parents as impostors, hence her vituperations.
There
are still sceptics who believe that just as no one knows what Boko Haram is
today, nobody knows how information is manipulated to achieve certain interests
in this age of terrorism: They reason that, at first, we were told 129 girls were
kidnapped; later, the number became 234, and then 276.
Could one truck or four Hilux vans have been used to abduct 276 girls even if
they were packed like sardines? Some girls that later escaped implicated some
local people and some people in the same school where the crime was committed.
Could 30 trucks or vans have moved into Chibok and departed with 276 girls
undetected?
I see no justification for Minister Alhassan’s attack on the Chibok parents,
except that she perhaps had some doubts too. I see no other reason for the
effrontery of asking the Chibok parents to stop harassing the current
government. Or scolding them for making demands.
Or reminding them they were not invited to the presidential villa. The parents
were really longsuffering. As I stated, if I were one of them [God forbid!], I
wouldn’t have had the disposition to attend any meeting with any government
official in the first place.
And if I did, I would have punched Alhassan’s nose if she dared add insult to
injury. For failing to empathise with the troubled Chibok parents, Alhassan has
simply put her name in the black book of not just the parents from Chibok but
all parents in the world. It’s bad enough that she spoke as minister of women
affairs; what if she had been sworn in as the governor of Taraba State?
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