Goodluck Jonathan Spent Over $4M Lobbying Against Nigeria’s ‘Bring Back Our Girls’ Campaign, Lawyer Claims
Supporters of the "Bring Back Our Girls" campaign hold a
placard as Nigerian police block them from marching to President
Goodluck Jonathan's official residence in the capital of Abuja, Oct. 14,
2014.
Photo: Pius Utomi Expei/AFP/Getty Images
A U.S.-based human rights lawyer and humanitarian
worker said Tuesday that former Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan
spent more than $4 million, or about 1 billion naira, on lobbying
against the “Bring Back Our Girls” movement last year, after Boko Haram
abducted hundreds of schoolgirls from the northeast town of Chibok. In
an interview with a Nigerian newspaper, Emmanuel Ogebe said the Jonathan
administration’s response to the kidnapping was a “colossal failure.”
“The Jonathan-led-government had spent over $4 million fighting the
'Bring Back Our Girls’ campaign and almost fighting the veracity of the
abduction, saying it wasn't true,” Ogebe told Premium Times Tuesday. “The response was a colossal failure, it was an unmitigated disaster.”
Boko Haram militants descended on a boarding school in northeast
Nigeria on the night of April 14, 2014. By morning, the militant group
had herded 276 schoolgirls into trucks and vanished behind the forest
brush in the town of Chibok. Some of the girls have managed to escape on
their own since then, but over 200 are still missing, and government
search efforts have been unsuccessful despite a global social media
campaign and pleas from international leaders.
Jonathan, who was president at the time, spent more money fighting
the campaign than helping the girls or their families, according to
Ogebe, who cited records published in the United States. “People’s
children have been abducted. Instead of addressing the issues at hand,
you bring about conspiracy theories, you attack the parents, you claim
the opposition are out to rubbish you, and then you hire PR companies at
millions of dollars to launder your image,” Ogebe,
who was born in Nigeria and exiled to the United States after becoming a
political detainee for speaking out against Nigerian dictator Gen. Sani
Abacha, told Premium Times. “ I did not see anywhere where that level
of assistance was pumped into the Chibok community.
The girls’ plight garnered attention on Twitter last year using the hashtag
#BringBackOurGirls. High-profile political figures such as first lady
Michelle Obama, former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and
British Prime Minister David Cameron endorsed the campaign. But the
conversation on social media never rendered political action,
highlighting the disconnect between public support and political will
that often arises in international conflict, media experts said.
“Emotional stories like this one play particularly well on social
platforms, which further speeds up sharing and spreading,” Kate Brodock,
president of Girls in Tech and an adjunct professor at the S.I.
Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University, told IBT
in April. “It was a perfect storm of user behavior and compelling
story. But real change will more likely come with follow-up action and
efforts.” Nigerian
President Mohammadu Buhari and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo pose with
the coordinator of the Bring Back Our Girls movement, Oby Ezekwesili,
and other members of the group campaigning for the release of the Chibok
schoolgirls in Abuja, Nigeria, July 8, 2015.Photo: Philip Ojisua/AFP/Getty Images
The lack of action proved to be a political embarrassment for
Jonathan, who lost his bid for a second term in March after he was
widely condemned for his slow response to the Chibok kidnapping. Ogebe
said he’s confident President Muhammadu Buhari, who won the election and
took office in late May, will be more effective. Buhari, a former
military ruler, has vowed to crush Boko Haram in a matter of months, but
the Islamic militants have ramped up attacks.
“Anyone who comes in and does the opposite [of the last
administration] will do better. That said, Boko Haram’s atrocities since
the handover have heightened,” Ogebe told Premium Times. “When [Buhari]
said that he is giving three months for it to be wiped out, we hope
that this is not the three months that has been announced over and over
again. But as a military person himself, he has a formula, battle plan
and strategy to extinguish the Boko Haram menace. ”
Boko Haram, which pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group in March, was the deadliest
terrorist organization in 2014. While the terrorist organization, also
known as ISIS, was reportedly responsible for 6,073 deaths in 2014, Boko
Haram was even more deadly, accounting for 6,644 fatalities, a 300
percent increase over the previous year, according to the Global Terrorism Index, published by the Institute for Economics and Peace, a global think tank headquartered in Sydney.
Since launching its Islamic insurgency in northeastern Nigeria six
years ago, Boko Haram has expanded its rampages into neighboring
Cameroon, Chad and Niger. The Sunni militant group has killed about
20,000 people and displaced more than 2 million. Like ISIS, Boko Haram
seeks to establish a caliphate governed by Islamic law, aka Shariah.
posted by Abuja amebo repoter.
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