Borno residents slam FG’s silence over non-release of 48 abducted school children

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu

The residents of Borno State have expressed their previous concerns over the federal government’s prolonged silence since the abduction of 48 primary and junior secondary school pupils and  students in Mussa community, Askira Uba local government area of the state.

The aggreivied residents noted that the government had prioritized a similar incident in Oyo State, where pupils and teachers were kidnapped, while downplaying the abduction in the state.

Speaking with The Guardian on Monday in a telephone interview in Maiduguri, the Chairman of the  Civil Society Organisations in the state, Abubakar Suleiman, said the federal government is not fair to the victims of both incidents.

He said, “The federal government visited Oyo State with a high-powered delegation, including the National Security Adviser, Minister of Defense, Chief of Staff to the President, among others, with a helicopter and landed at the local government where the abduction took place.

“In the case of Borno, around 416 people were kidnapped in Ngoshe on the 3rd of May. There has not been any federal government intervention. We also had another incident on the 16 of May; 42 students were kidnapped in Askira Uba. There was no federal government delegation. This doesn’t demonstrate that the federal government is treating victims equally without any discrimination of release of captives

He, therefore called on the federal government to intensify search and rescue operations for all the victims in captivity.

“Our call is for the government to intensify the search, to come and interact with parents and assure them that their children will be united with them as soon as possible. They should also provide us with updates on the issue and let us know when the children are coming back,” Suleiman added.

A Prominent Political Analyst in the state, Abubakar Kareto, also echoed similar sentiments while condemning the attacks.

He said, “Both abductions of the 42 pupils from the Mussa community in Askira Uba, Borno State, taken by Boko Haram insurgents, and the Oriire in Oyo State, where 46 students and teachers were taken, are heartbreaking reminders that rural schools remain highly vulnerable soft targets and are exposing how unsafe it is to send kids to school in Nigeria.

He said that, however, a visible and unsettling imbalance exists in how the federal government responded to these two attacks, for vindication.

“The Oyo State attack also occurred on the very day that of Askira Uba. While the government launched a rapid, high-profile response to the Oyo incident, including a federal visit led by the Chief of Staff and accompanied by the National Security Adviser, which also followed with a decision to immediately deploy 1,000 forest guards, the Borno abduction has mostly received standard rhetorical condemnations with no visible energy that can be compared in any way to the Oyo State incident,” he said.

According to him, such an uneven approach will create unease among the neglected communities and clearly signal a tiered security priority, where a mass abduction by a designated terrorist group in the Northeast deserves the same executive urgency and aggressive tactical assets as an attack in any other region.

“Therefore, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and the military high command should deploy the exact intensity of kinetic and intelligence resources to safely rescue the Askira Uba children. This will make everyone, not only the victim, feel belonged,” he stated.

Meanwhile, the President of the Borno South Youths Alliance Forum, Samaila Kaigama, urged political leaders in the state to emulate their counterparts in the southwest, particularly in hand.

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