Opinion
Still On Boko Haram
It is indeed heart-break
ing to see innocent, harmless young girls, young boys, men, women being murdered every now and then in this country. Since 2009, Boko Haram Islamic group has seized dozens of villages and towns, attacked churches, mosques, institutions, leaving thousand of people dead and destroying properties.
Of all these attacks, the most pathetic is that on schools where lifes of innocent children in pursuit of knowledge are wasted. Just last Monday, there was a suicide bomb attack on Government Science Secondary School, Potiskum, Yobe State. The incident was typically daring and ruthless. As the students gathered for Monday morning assembly among them stood a suicide bomber dressed in their very school uniform, explosives hidden in his back pack. The blast tore through the high school assembly hall, killing not less than 47 people and injuring over 90 others.
In the same Yobe State, on February 25, 2014, fifty nine boys were massacred during their sleep at Federal Government College Buni Yadi by Boko Haram.
The abduction of over 200 school girls at government Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State Seven months ago still remains a ridicule yet to be solved. Despite all the local and international attention this particularly incident attracted the girls are yet to be brought back.
Records have it that in 2012 fourteen schools were burnt down in Maiduguri, Borno State, forcing over 7,000 children out of formal education, and pushed down enrolment rate.
The story is not different in Adamawa State in the same North East region, as many school children have been killed and many others have withdrawn from school due to Boko Haram activities.
Truly, this development should give any well meaning Nigerian a cause for concerns especially against the background of a recent report that there are more children out of school in Nigeria than in any other country in the world. According to the 11th Education for All Global Monitoring Report, Nigeria is now one of the only fifteen countries projected to have fewer tahn 80 per cent of its primary school aged children enrolled in 2015.
It is also on record that while a handful of these out of school children can be found in the south, a larger percentage comes from the north. It therefore becomes worrisome how northern elites, northern elders, states and local governments, will watch such an il educated region depreciate the more.
One thinks that if there is any reason why the northern elites, elders leaders and government should rise up against Boko Haram this is it. They cannot afford to watch their children drop out of school while children in other parts of the country are progressing educationally.
Having spent my youth service year in a secondary school in the North East, I know the wide gap between the North and the South educationally which efforts must be made by all stake holders to narrow instead of allowing Boko Haram to widen it.
However, we must not see this battle as that of the north alone. It concerns every Nigerian. Whatever must be done to stop the killing of innocent school children must be done now. Senator Alkaji Jafere, representing Yobe South Senatorial District in the Senate while reacting to last Monday’s suicide bombing on Government Science Secondary school Potiskum appealed for a change in strategy by security operatives to contain insurgency in the state and other parts of the north east.
Perhaps that appeal should be considered since its obvious that the strategies so far employed have not yielded much result. It is been over a year that a state of emergency was declared in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states, yet the audacious attacks of the terrorist group continues unabated. With the numerous attack on schools in the past, one would have expected that security would be have been beefed up in schools in this region prone to Boko Haram attack but the latest happening showed that was far from being the case.
The number one responsibility of any government is to protect lives and properties of the citizens. Any government which fails to carry out this basic responsibility cannot be said to have fared well. It is so sad that five years into the insurgency by Boko Haram, little head way has been made in halting the attacks that have killed thousands and displaced hundreds of thousands more in the north.
There was a brief glimmer of hope last month, when the military announced it had reached a cease-fire following talks with Boko Haram. Hardly after 24hrs, the so called cease fire crumbled and the attacks continued.
Honestly, urgent action must be taken now to put an end to activities of Boko. Haram and restore people confidence in the government. The different political parties should shed the different toga of party affiliations and come together to solve this national problem so that our children can carry on their educational pursuit unhindered and without fear. Let’s not forget that it is these children’s right to go to school. Let us also note that if no solution is found to the educational problems caused by Boko Haram insurgency, this country will continue to be at risk. Illiteracy is like a disease and until this disease is cured and our government becomes effective, Boko Haram crisis will be a child’s play compared to what will happen in future.
Calista Ezeaku
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