President Goodluck Jonathan on Monday
promised Miss Malala Yousafzai, the Pakistani girl who was almost killed
by the Taliban in her country’s Swat Valley District, that he would
soon meet with parents of the abducted pupils of Government Secondary
School, Chibok, Borno State.
Malala had been targeted by the Taliban because of her girl child education campaign.
The Chibok girls had been kidnapped from their hostels by members of the violent Islamic sect, Boko Haram, since April 14.
Jonathan told the 17-year-old Pakistani
girl that the abducted Chibok girls would soon regain their freedom and
that his government would grant scholarship to the girls to study in
other parts of the country.
Malala had paid the President a visit in Abuja as part of her three-day visit to Nigeria.
The teenager disclosed what transpired
between her and the President to State House correspondents at the end
of the closed-door session.
She said she intimated Jonathan with the
subject of her earlier meetings with some of the girls that had escaped
from Boko Haram custody and the parents of those who are still in
captivity.
She said she also conveyed the desire of the parents to meet with the President in order to share their stories with him.
Malala expressed the belief that the President would fulfil all the promises made to her on the abducted girls.
She said, “I am here in Nigeria on my
17th birthday for a price which is to see that every child goes to
school. This year, my objective is to speak up for my Nigerian sisters,
about 200 of them who are in the captivity of Boko Haram and I met
President Goodluck Jonathan for this purpose.
“I conveyed the voice of my sisters who
are out of school or who are still under the abduction of Boko Haram.
And for those girls who escaped from the abduction but still do not have
education. And in the meeting, I highlighted the same issues which the
girls and their parents told me in the past two days.
“The parents said they really wanted to
meet with the President to share their stories with him. And I asked the
President if he wanted to meet with the parents of the girls, the
President assured me that he would meet with them.
“I spoke to the President about the
girls who complained that they could not go to school despite the fact
that they want to become doctors, engineers and teachers. But the
government is not providing them any facility. They also need health
facility, security and the government is not doing anything.
“Yesterday (Sunday), I also met with the
parents of these girls who are still under the abduction of Boko Haram
and they were crying and hopeless. But still, they have this hope that
there is still someone who can help them.
“They asked me if there is any chance
for them to meet the President because at this time, they need the
President’s support, so I asked the President if it is possible for him
to go and see them to encourage them and the President did promise me
that he will meet the parents of these girls.
“I am hopeful that these two promises,
the return of the girls from Boko Haram captivity and meeting with their
parents will be fulfilled and we will see it soon.”
She said although she had received the assurances of the President on her requests, she would not stop talking.
Malala said she would be counting days and would be looking forward to when the abducted girls would return home.
“I can’t stop this campaign until I see
those girls return back to their families and continue the agitation.
This is the position of the Malala Foundation,” she declared.
She said during the meeting, Jonathan
also told her some of the difficulties being faced in government’s quest
to rescue the girls.
She said one of the challenges was that the girls could be targeted during military operation.
The campaigner, however expressed fears that politics could interfere in the fulfilment of the President’s promises.
“He has made promises but in politics
nothing is clear. But the President said these girls are his daughters
and he is pained by their sufferings and that he has his own daughters
and he can feel what they are feeling.,” she said.
The Director of Operations, Malala
Foundation, Eason Jordan, said President Jonathan was willing to meet
with the parents of the schoolgirls any time from now.
Meanwhile, a statement by Jonathan’s
spokesman, Reuben Abati, on Monday said the Federal Government had been
constrained in rescuing the abducted schoolgirls by the overriding
imperative of ensuring that the girls’ lives were not endangered in any
rescue attempt.
Abati quoted the President as saying
during the meeting with Malala that the notion that the Federal
Government had not been doing enough to find and rescue the abducted
girls was wrong and misplaced.
He said the government was doing
everything possible to ensure that the girls were rescued alive and
safely returned to their parents.
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