A Nigerian group known as Christian Women on the Plateau for Peace and Security, has protested to the Plateau state legislature in Jos where it called for the release of Leah Sharibu (the sole Dapchi girl still in captivity) and the remaining Chibok girls abducted over three years ago.
The group’s General Secretary, Mrs. Joy Machunga and a cleric, Mrs. Esther Ibanga, said: “As Christian women on the Plateau, we have all gathered here in unity and solidarity with Leah.”
They regretted that many women and children in the area had been rendered destitute, while widows and orphans in particular, had been badly traumatised.
The group noted: “Our heartfelt anguish, sorrow and concern over the continued captivity and the current plight of our daughter and sister, 14-year old Leah Sharibu, one of the girls kidnapped by Boko Haram insurgents on February 19, 2018 from Government Girls Science and Technical College, Dapchi, in Yobe State know no bounds.”
It regretted that the sole offence for the continued captivity of the teenager was her refusal to renounce her Christian faith, asserting that, “We share in her identity and it has become clear that Christians in Nigeria, especially in the northern part, are increasingly becoming endangered species,” they stated.
While lending their support to the immediate release of the girl, the women said: “We the Christian women on the Plateau wish to remind the President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of his promise to Nigeria during his 2015 inauguration speech in which he said he belongs to nobody but belongs to everybody.”
They appealed to government to set up a task force comprising credible government and civil society officials and women groups to resettle and rehabilitate the internally displaced persons (IDPs) in the state.
Responding, the Speaker of the assembly, Peter Azi, said the lawmakers share in their moment of grief, especially at a time that “our own daughter needs us most.” He noted that Sharibu’s case was a testament that women were still endangered species, urging the Federal Government to secure the release of the teenager by all means possible in good time.