I woke up (earlier this week) to the good news that the 279 girls kidnapped last week from Government Girls Junior Secondary School (GGJSS), Jengebe, Zamfara State, had been released.
I had my piece for this week all ready and had to discard it, but I have never been more grateful for a curve ball being thrown at me. When the news of their abduction broke, parallels were immediately drawn with that of the Chibok girls which happened seven years ago.
Everyone wondered if in 2028, the Zamfara girls would still be in captivity. Of the 276 girls kidnapped by Boko Haram from Government Secondary School Chibok in 2014, 103 were released, 57 fled and four later escaped while 112 are still missing.
Insecurity in Nigeria did not start with the Chibok girls’ abduction. Insecurity across the nation has been there for years and has gotten increasingly worse as bandits, including Boko Haram, operate with increasing impunity.
Kidnapping for ransom has become so commonplace that when people go out and do not return, in whatever part of Nigeria, their families’ first thoughts are that they have been involved in an accident or have been kidnapped.
The wealthy hire armed escorts. Those who cannot afford remain under the radar of kidnappers. And when they do, only the most egregious make it to the news.
People would tell you as casually as if they were talking about power outage, of a neighbour or a relative or someone they know who was kidnapped and was later released after ransom was paid. We understand that those are the lucky ones.
My former hostel mate and friend at FGGC Abuja, Sherifat, recently lost her husband to kidnappers. He was abducted on his farm in Oyo, and 10 days after his family paid the demanded ransom; his remains were discovered in a bush.
In the North, the very poor who should not be abducted for ransom because they have little to give, Boko Haram and other armed groups abduct their children from schools which are poorly guarded and often located far away from towns.
Mass abductions from schools, therefore, offer very little risk to these groups, although in the last two cases, the governors of the affected states have claimed that no ransom was paid.
Maybe it is not the security the schools cannot promise that is the problem, but that the bandit groups, whether Boko Haram or copycat groups, are well equipped.
At the time of the Zamfara kidnapping, the gunmen apparently also attacked a military camp and a checkpoint near the school,making it impossible for soldiers to respond to the raid. And Boko Haram has long ceased to be the rag tag army of insurgents exclusive to the North East.
Since 2009, its attacks have affected not just Nigeria, but also Chad, Cameroon and Niger. In March, 2015, its leader, Shekau, pledged the group’s allegiance to the Islamic State. Less than a week later, Abu Bakr al Baghdadi accepted the pledge.
The Multinational Joint Task Force (MNJTF) with soldiers from Benin, Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria, which was set up in 1994 was revitalised in 2015 to quell the rising insurgency, but it is obvious that the war against the jihadists is far from over.
On December 12, 2020, a village in Niger was attacked and 60 per cent of the village was destroyed with many people killed. In October, 2020, schools in Northern Cameroon were closed down out of fear of Boko Haram attacks.
On January 8, 2021, a village in Northern Cameroon was attacked with more than 20 people killed. In Nigeria, within the space of two days, two schools were attacked by bandits that may very well be Boko Haram.
I watched an interview with one of the parents of the abducted girls who said that should her child return, she would not be allowed to return to school.
In a country and in a region, particularly where school enrollment is historically low, and especially so for girls, this lack of security keeping children away from school is a huge setback. This parent is not alone.
Would you send your children to school if you were not reasonably sure of their safety? Of what use would the education be if they were abducted and never seen again and you do not know whether they are alive or dead, sold into slavery, forced into marriage
or recruited ...? I'm happy the 2 recent school abductions ended relatively well (although the Kagara abduction resulted in 1student’s death).However, like with everyone else I know, I'm concerned that the question is not if, but when another abduction will occur. Sadly!

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More from @chikaunigwe

14 Feb
So last week I wrote about the disinheritance of daughters in parts of Igbo land & to my disbelief, there were Ndi Igbo claiming that this customary law of inheritance that privileges sons doesn't exist, that I had somehow fabricated this out of thin air
dailytrust.com/free-yourselves
(even as I and others on my TL gave concrete, real life examples and some Igbo daughters have successfully brought cases contesting the law before civil court).
One ill-informed young man stated that I had to “malign Igbo culture” so that “white people” would give me money. LOL. I understand that we don’t like to see the worst of ourselves reflected back to us but how do we progress if we refuse to confront it?
Read 25 tweets
8 Feb
from: escr-net.org/caselaw/2018/o…
"Onyibor Anekwe & Anor v. Mrs. Maria Nweke, Supreme Court of Nigeria, SC. 129/2013.
Gender Equality in Inheritance Rights affirmed by Nigerian Supreme Court
This case challenges the customary law of male primogeniture of the Awka people in Nigeria.
The Supreme Court of Nigeria found that any custom that denies women, particularly widows, their inheritance, is repugnant to natural justice, equity and good conscience and is condemned by the Supreme Court.
Following the death of her husband, Mrs. Maria Nweke was asked to vacate her house by her late husband’s father on the ground that she had no male child in the house. erty goes to the deceased’s father and eldest brother.
Read 11 tweets
7 Feb
I write about disinheriting daughters in parts of Igbo land, a culture that privileges men and Igbo fathers not writing their wills in toy column today: "In 1981, when Lazarus Ogbonna Ukeje died, his daughter Gladys, was supposed to inherit nothing from him.
Not because the father thought she’d squander whatever inheritance she got. Not because she didn’t want any part of it. The reason was because she was his daughter and not his son.
Like many men of his generation, Lazarus Ukeje had no will, but it was taken for granted that the Igbo customary law of succession excluding female children from eligibility to inherit their fathers’ property would prevail.
Read 16 tweets
31 Jan
Of all the stupidest things I read this week, none was more stupid than the Ekiti State Police Command standing behind their dismissal of a pregnant policewoman because according to Mr. Babatunde Mobayo, the command’s commissioner,
“Section 126 of the regulation (states) that married woman police (sic) who is pregnant may be granted maternity leave, while Section 127 (states that) unmarried woman police (sic) who becomes pregnant shall be discharged from the Force" & needs IGP's approval to be enlisted
So if Sis had been married, she would not have been punished. And if the man who got her pregnant had been a police officer one is to assume he wouldn’t have lost his job. It wouldn’t have mattered then whether he was married or not.
Read 17 tweets
17 Sep 20
Reasonable people make the mistake of thinking that everyone on Twitter is reasonable. That's why they fall into the trap of arguing with people, wondering why they can't see sense. Do you walk into a market and start /sustain conversations with everyone?
When a stranger walks up to your car window and starts telling you your choice of music is crap, do you stand in traffic arguing with that person?
When your child's mate comes to your front door and starts shouting madly that you know nothing at all about something you're an expert in , do you try to reason with them?
Read 5 tweets
2 Jun 20
A Manual for White Allies /Potential Allies of Black People in America
1.Understand that allyship is intentional. You are not an ally because your partner is black, your best friend is black, your dog is black;
you like Mexican food,you watch foreign movies,you've been to South Africa;you adopted a black kid,you're a liberal, your kid's best friend is black. You're an ally because you've chosen to take a side against injustice,& you make that choice every single day,in deed and in words
2. Learn to listen with humility and compassion. Do not interrupt to say"I know how you feel," or "I was once discriminated against" or "I was picked on at school for having red/thin/whatever hair."
Read 11 tweets

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