
Mrs. Patience Jonathan
| credits: news.naij.com
| credits: news.naij.com
The
wife of the President, Mrs. Patience Jonathan, on Friday night
practically took over investigations into the case of over 200 girls,
who were abducted from Government Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State
on April 15.
Just as her husband, President Goodluck
Jonathan, was setting up a fact-finding committee on the matter, she
presided over a five-hour marathon meeting of stakeholders that ended at
about 11pm.
While announcing that the meeting would
continue on Sunday (today) by 4pm, the President’s wife summoned some
individuals, which she believed would assist in unravelling the
circumstances leading to the girls’ abduction and their whereabouts.
Among those summoned were the Borno State
Commissioner of Police, the state Commissioner for Education, the
chairman of the local government, the divisional police officer in
charge of Chibok, the wife of the village head, the school principal and
the school gateman.
Others were: two teachers from the
school, the chairman and secretary of the school’s Parents Teachers
Association, two house parents, two parents of the missing children, as
well as two parents whose children had returned home.
Mrs. Jonathan said if the schoolgirls
were not found by Sunday, she would not hesitate to lead women on a
protest match to Maiduguri to demand for their whereabouts from the
Borno State Governor, Kashim Shettima.
“By Sunday, we must have our children. If
not, we will match to Borno and ask the governor to give us our
children. We will match to National Assembly to see the Senate President
and will also match to see the President,” she said.
She also announced the composition of a
committee saddled with the responsibility of ensuring that those she
summoned would attend the Sunday meeting.
The committee, which she said would be
chaired by the wife of Borno State governor, who was absent at the
meeting, has the wife of the Senator and a member of the House of
Representatives from the affected constituency, wife of the minister
from Borno State and wife of the chairman of the affected local
government area as members.
She said, “Within three days, something
will happen. We will get to the root of the matter. I don’t come out and
go back empty. I have come out and something must happen.
“I have been dealing with this secretly but you have taken me to the market square. There is no more hiding.”
Mrs. Jonathan said as the chief security
officers of their states, state governors must be ready to take the heat
for any act of insecurity in their domain.
She stated that during the administration
of former President Olusegun Obasanjo, the former President could call
her husband who was the Bayelsa State governor in the middle of the
night once any news of kidnapping was reported.
“Governors are the security officers of
their states. During Obasanjo’s time, anytime a white man was kidnapped
in Bayelsa State, he would call the governor (Jonathan) at 2am and give
him 24 hours to produce the kidnapped person.
“We now know who to ask for our children. We don’t need to embark on demonstrations from state to state,” she said.
Meanwhile, facts emerged yesterday as to
the reason behind the decision to leave Government Secondary School,
Chibok, open on April 14, 2014, when over 200 schoolgirls were
abducted.
A state government official said the
decision to leave the school open was made after the people of the town
appealed to the Borno State Governor, Kashim Shettima, not to move their
students to another town.
Pleading anonymity, he said the people of
Chibok, who argued that the town was safe and in fact safer than
Maiduguri or Biu the two towns the governor was contemplating moving the
students to, told the governor that they would be unhappy if anything
happened to their daughters due to the redeployment.
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