Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Governor Shettima Responsible For The Kidnapping Of Chibok Girls. - Federal Ministry Of Education


 E-X-P-O-S-E-D!!!
Governor Shettima Responsible For The Kidnapping Of Chibok Girls. - Federal Ministry Of Education.

**The Chibok abduction would have been avoided if Borno Governor had heeded written advice -Wike
**urges the governor to own up to his mistake and avoid politicizing the unfortunate incident.

The Supervising Minister of Education, Barr. Ezenwo Nyesom Wike has stated that abduction of the Chibok girls would have been avoided had the Borno State Government heeded his written advice not to conduct Senior Secondary Certificate Examination in areas facing insecurity.
The Minister spoke in Abuja yesterday while addressing delegates at the First Conference of Certified Librarians. He said that the Federal Government is working alongside other stakeholders to ensure that the abducted girls are reunited with their families.
Barr. Wike said that he was availing Nigerians and the international community the true position of events, because the Borno State governor has deliberately misinformed the international community through interviews with foreign media organizations.

He noted that rather than play politics with the unfortunate situation, the Borno State Governor should be courageous enough to admit that he erred by rejecting the written advice of the Federal Ministry of Education. According to him: "I am responding to this issue because the wife of the Vice President, Her Excellency Mrs Matilda Amissah-Arthur raised it.
I am personally wrote to the governors of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states on the relocation of students for the SSCE because of the security situation in the three states. None of the state governors replied the letter". He said that all stakeholders must forge a united front to defend education against those who want to discourage the girl-child and other from attending school, rather than seek political gains from the regrettable situation.
"The safety and security of our children must not be politicized under any circumstance. I assure you that the Federal Government and other partners are working round the clock to ensure our girls are released.
It is therefore uncharitable for anyone to say that the President is not doing anything about the girls", the Minister said. The Minister read the letter dated 12th March, 2014 with reference number HMSE/FME/147/VOL.1/150 and titled: "Security challenges and the conduct of the 2014 WASSCE and SSCE in Borno, Yobe and parts of Adamawa States" to the delegates at the conference.

The letter read: "In view of the current security challenges in the North East states of the country, the West African Examination Council, WAEC, and the National Examination Council, NECO, have expressed concerns over the safety of their officers who will be deployed to supervise the conduct of the 2014 diet of the examination in your state.

"In response to the concerns, I have directed that the candidates in the Federal Unity Colleges be assembled in the respective state capitals where they are to sit for the examinations in safe locations. You are please enjoined to make contingency arrangements for candidates from public and private schools in your state to sit for the examinations in safe locations".
The three paragraph letter concluded thus: "Details of your arrangements should be forwarded to the Federal Ministry of Education and the two examination bodies for their information and necessary action".
‪#‎GovShettimaBringBackOurGirls‬. - Hope For Nigeria.

Source: www.fb.com/hopefornigeria Page, if U have not done that already.

Report any suspicious activity to the law enforcement agency, as that will save lives


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Tuesday, May 20, 2014

The Villagers Who Killed Over 200 Boko Haram Terrorists Are Heroes

Photo Credit: Hope for Nigeria.


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Monday, May 19, 2014

Kaye Whiteman: Lagos: A Cultural and Literary History



Lagos is one of the fastest growing cities in the world, expected in some projections to have a population of 25 million by 2025. This will make it the biggest metropolis in sub-Saharan Africa and possibly the world's third largest city. This phenomenal and continuing growth gives it a heady turbulence, especially as it only took on the form of a coherent urban entity in the eighteenth century.


After Nigeria's independence Lagos remained both trading hub and, for thirty years, a federal capital and political vortex. Now its driving sense of 'can-do', its outreach and vitality, make it a fulcrum and a channel for commercial and cultural talent. Kaye Whiteman explores a city that has constantly re-invented itself, from the first settlement on an uninhabited island to the creation of the port in the early years of the twentieth century. Lagos is still defined by its curious network of islands and lagoons, where erosion and reclamation lead to a permanently shifting topography, but history has thrust it into the role of a burgeoning mega-city, overcoming all nature's obstacles. The city's melting-pot has fertilised a unique literary and artistic flowering that is only now beginning to be appreciated by a world that has only seen slums and chaos. COLONIAL CITY: Portuguese influences; the 1861 Treaty of Cession and the British colonialists; architectural traces: schools and government buildings; the move towards independence. CITY OF ENTREPRENEURS: trading through the centuries: Sierra Leoneans and Brazilians; traditional markets and modern malls; the Central Business District. THE CITY OF WORDS AND MUSIC: a counterpoint to the alleged philistinism of its businessmen; the views of writers Wole Soyinka and Chinua Achebe; artist and sculptor Ben Enwonwu; the musical genius Fela Kuti.



 
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Boko Haram And U.S. Counterterrorism Assistance To Nigeriia: Get The Facts


“The kidnapping of hundreds of children by Boko Haram is an unconscionable crime, and we will do everything possible to support the Nigerian government to return these young women to their homes and to hold the perpetrators to justice. I will tell you, my friends, I have seen this scourge of terror across the planet, and so have you. They don't offer anything except violence. They don't offer a health care plan, they don't offer schools. They don't tell you how to build a nation; they don't talk about how they will provide jobs. They just tell people, "You have to behave the way we tell you to," and they will punish you if you don't.”
--Secretary of State John F. Kerry


Nigeria is a key strategic partner in Africa. Nigeria has the continent’s largest population and largest economy, and it plays a vital role in efforts to resolve crises and promote stability and prosperity in West Africa and beyond. In the midst of rapid economic growth, however, Nigeria faces security challenges, notably Boko Haram (BH), a violent Islamist movement that has staged regular attacks in northern Nigeria since 2010. Given Nigeria’s importance as a regional political and economic leader, the U.S. has a vital interest in helping to strengthen Nigeria’s democratic institutions, boost Nigeria’s prosperity and security, and ensure opportunity for all of its citizens. The U.S. and Nigeria also work closely together in multilateral fora, including the UN Security Council, where Nigeria is serving a term as a non-permanent member for 2014-2015.

As the President noted in his National Defense University speech in May 2013, countering terrorism requires a holistic approach. We continue to work with Nigeria and other international partners to help promote and support such an approach to Boko Haram. The United States has been working to counter BH for many years, and we will continue to do so. The first part of this fact sheet provides information about BH and the many atrocities it committed in Nigeria prior to its attack on a girls’ secondary school in Chibok, Borno State, where it kidnapped approximately 300 girls. The latter part provides information about various U.S. Department of State initiatives and programs to assist Nigeria’s counterterrorism efforts, such as the Antiterrorism Assistance Program and the Trans-Sahara Counterterrorism Partnership.

* * *

The U.S. government designated Boko Haram as a Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO) and as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist under Executive Order (E.O.) 13224 on November 14, 2013. (A transcript of an interview with senior officials about this designation can be found here: http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2013/11/217532.htm.) BH commander Abubakar Shekau, Khalid al-Barnawi, and Abubakar Adam Kambar were designated on June 21, 2012, as Specially Designated Global Terrorists under section 1(b) of E.O. 13224. (A fact sheet about FTO and E.O. designations can be found here: http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2014/01/219520.htm.) Since June 2013, the State Department’s Rewards for Justice program has advertised a reward offer of up to US $7 million for information leading to the location of Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau.

BH is a Nigeria-based group responsible for numerous attacks in northern and northeastern Nigeria that have killed thousands of people since its emergence in 2009, and conducted high-profile kidnappings of Westerners in the Far North Region of Cameroon. In 2013 alone, BH has carried out kidnappings, killings, bombings, and attacks on civilian and military targets in northern Nigeria, resulting in over 1,000 deaths and injuries. BH primarily operates in northeastern Nigeria, Cameroon’s Far North Region, and the Lake Chad Basin, and receives the bulk of its funding from bank robberies and related criminal activities, including extortion and kidnapping for ransom. The group espouses a violent extremist ideology and at times has received some limited assistance, including funds and training, from al Qa’ida in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM).

Among its most lethal attacks, BH was responsible for indiscriminate attacks in Benisheikh, Nigeria in September 2013 that killed more than 160 civilians, many of them women and children. Other major attacks that have been claimed by or attributed to BH since 2011 have included:


An August 26, 2011, a bomb attack on the UN building in Abuja killed at least 21 people and injured over 120.

On November 4, 2011, multiple vehicle-borne improvised explosive device (VBIED) and improvised explosive device (IED) attacks in Yobe and Borno States targeted security force offices and the Military's Joint Task Force (JTF) offices, as well as several markets and 11 churches.

More than 100 people were killed, including nearly 70 bystanders at a major traffic circle in the center of Damaturu, Yobe State.

On January 20, 2012, multiple near-simultaneous attacks in Kano State were carried out on at least 12 targets including police stations, an immigration office, and the residence of an Assistant Inspector General of Police. Over 150 persons were killed and hundreds were wounded.
In April 2012, assailants attacked the Theatre Hall at Bayero University, Kano, with IEDs and gunshots, killing nearly 20 persons.

On April 26, 2012, VBIEDs simultaneously exploded at the offices of This Day newspaper in Abuja and Kaduna, killing five persons and wounding many others.

On June 17, 2012, attacks on three churches in Kaduna State killed worshippers and instigated violence throughout the State. At least 10 people were killed and an additional 78 were injured in the riots that ensued.

On February 8, 2013 nine Nigerian women working in a polio vaccination campaign in Kano were killed by gunmen riding in three-wheeled motorcycles; several other polio workers were injured.

On March 18, 2013, a VBIED attack on two luxury buses at a motor park in the Sabon Gari neighborhood of Kano killed more than 20 persons and wounded scores.

On July 6, 2013, over 50 students were killed in their dormitories at Mamudo Government Secondary School in Yobe State.
On August 11, 2013, gunmen killed approximately 44 persons praying at a mosque outside Maiduguri and another 12 civilians in a near-simultaneous attack at a nearby location in Borno State.

On September 29, 2013, gunmen killed more than 40 students in the dormitory of an agricultural technical school in Yobe State.
In November 2013, BH members kidnapped a French priest in Cameroon.

On December 2, 2013, a coordinated and complex attack by violent extremists on the Maiduguri airport and air force base killed over 24 persons, wounded dozens, and destroyed a large amount of military equipment, including several military helicopters.
On December 20, 2013, violent extremists assaulted the Nigerian army barracks in Bama, southern Borno State, in a well-coordinated attack that killed approximately 20 military personnel and numerous civilians.

On January 14, 2014, at least at least 31 were killed and 50 injured by suicide bomber in Maiduguri, Borno State, Nigeria.
On February 16, 2014, BH raided Izghe village, Borno State, killing an estimated 115 people.

On February 25, 2014, over 59 teenage boys were killed in an attack on Federal Government College, Buni Yadi, Yobe State, Nigeria.
On April 14, 2014, BH attacked a girls’ secondary school in Chibok, Borno State, Nigeria, with 16 killed and approximately 300 girls kidnapped.
Also on April 14, 2014, a morning rush hour bomb killed at least 71 on at a bus depot on the outskirts of Abuja.
On May 5, 2014, an attack lasting 12 hours on towns of Gamboru and Ngala in Borno State, Nigeria, killed an estimated 300 people.
Counterterrorism Assistance to Nigeria

Counterterrorism support to Nigeria focuses on building critical counterterrorism capabilities among Nigeria’s civilian and law enforcement agencies. This supports the larger U.S. objective of encouraging Nigeria to develop and implement a comprehensive approach to counter BH that upholds and enforces the rule of law, provides civilian protection, respects human rights and international norms, and addresses the underlying grievances that BH exploits (including through development gains and through responsive governance).

Based on our longstanding concerns about Boko Haram, we have a robust security dialogue and assistance relationship with Nigeria. As part of the Bi-National Commission Framework, we hold regular Regional Security working group meetings focused on the Boko Haram threat and ways our two governments can collaborate on a holistic approach to countering the group.

Our security assistance is in line with our efforts to ensure Nigeria takes a comprehensive approach to countering Boko Haram. We are working to build Nigerian law enforcement capacities to investigate terrorism cases, effectively deal with explosive devices, and secure Nigeria’s borders, while underscoring that the most effective counterterrorism policies and practices are those that respect human rights and are underpinned by the rule of law. We are also focused on enabling various Nigerian security services with fusing multiple information streams to develop a better understanding of Boko Haram. Our military assistance supports the professionalization of key military units and improves their ability to plan and implement appropriate steps to counter Boko Haram and ensure civilian security.

The State Department’s Antiterrorism Assistance (ATA) program enhances Nigerian law enforcement’s capability to prevent, detect, and investigate terrorism threats; secure Nigeria’s borders; and manage responses to terrorist incidents. ATA’s primary partners are the Nigerian Police Force (NPF), Customs Service, Immigration Service, and National Emergency Management Agency. ATA represents the only donor assistance to Nigerian law enforcement on identifying, diffusing, and the safe disposal of improvised explosives devices (IEDs). ATA curriculum has been integrated into NPF training curriculum, supporting its ability to respond to IED attacks in Abuja and to deploy to the northeast part of the country where Boko Haram attacks are the most frequent.

Countering violent extremism (CVE) programs aim to limit recruits to BH by reducing sympathy and support for its operations, through three primary objectives: (1) building resilience among communities most at risk of recruitment and radicalization to violence; (2) countering BH narratives and messaging; and building the CVE capacity of government and civil society. Such efforts include promoting engagement between law enforcement and citizens, and elevating the role of women civil society leaders in CVE.

The Center for Strategic Counterterrorism Communications has developed a strong partnership with the Government of Nigeria, and in conjunction with other international partners, provided assistance on developing a comprehensive communications strategy.

Nigeria is an active member of the Global Counterterrorism Forum (GCTF), and the United States has used the multilateral platform the Forum offers to introduce justice sector officials from Nigeria and neighboring countries to a series of judicial tools to investigate and prosecute terrorism cases in conformity with their domestic and international human rights obligations. As part of this effort, the United States and Nigeria have co-hosted a series of experts’ workshops in Abuja on these issues. In addition, Nigeria will join the United States as one of the founding members of the International Institute on Justice and the Rule of Law (IIJ), which will open its doors in June 2014 in Malta, and provide rule of law based training on how to counter terrorism and other transnational criminal activity within a rule of law framework. As a founding member, Nigeria will be expected to ensure its police, prosecutors, and prison officials are regular participants in IIJ trainings.

Nigeria is a member of the Trans-Sahara Counterterrorism Partnership (TSCTP), a U.S. government-funded and implemented effort designed to enhance regional security sector capacity to counter violent extremism, improve country and regional border and customs systems, strengthen financial controls, and build law enforcement and security sector capacity. TSCTP provides counter-IED and civil-military operations training to the Nigerian military, and crisis management and border security training to Nigerian law enforcement agencies. Nigeria also participates in larger regional training opportunities such as combat medical, military intelligence, communications and logistics training with other TSCTP partner nations (Algeria, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Chad, Mali, Mauritania, Morocco, Niger, Senegal, and Tunisia).

Nigeria has also agreed to become a pilot country to the Global Community Engagement and Resilience Fund (GCERF), a GCTF-inspired initiative announced by Secretary Kerry at the September 2013 GCTF ministerial. This will enable community-based organizations in Nigeria to receive grants from the GCERF to carry out grass-roots CVE projects.

The State Department’s Counterterrorism Finance (CTF) program provides training that aims to restrict Boko Haram’s ability to raise, move, and store money. CTF’s current focus provides Nigeria with cross border financial investigations training to work effectively with counterparts in neighboring countries on critical CTF cases.

Source: http://photos.state.gov/libraries/nigeria/487468/pdfs/Factsheet-BokoHaram-May142014.pdf

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Minister for Africa visits Nigeria on Boko Haram and Missing School Girls


Minister for Africa visits Nigeria

LONDON, 16 May 2014 / PRNewswire Africa / - UK's package of support to help locate missing Nigerian school girls welcomed by President Jonathan.

On returning from Nigeria Mark Simmonds said:
I am pleased I had the opportunity to discuss and agree with President Jonathan the UK's determination to support Nigeria's efforts to find the girls and end the threat from Boko Haram. President Jonathan welcomed the offer of further UK assistance, including a surveillance aircraft, a military team to embed with the Nigerian Army in their HQ and a team to work with the US experts to analyse information on the girls' location. We agreed on the importance of education and economic development in Northern Nigeria. The UK will contribute to the Safer Schools Initiative, spearheaded by Gordon Brown in his capacity as UN Special Envoy for Global Education. The UK will also double our investment in north eastern Nigeria conflict resolution programmes to make communities safer.

I handed to the President a personal invitation from the Foreign Secretary and UN Special Envoy for the High Commissioner for Refugees, Angelina Jolie, to attend the Global Summit to End Sexual Violence in Conflict in London in June. The abduction of the girls show why the international community must come together to tackle the scourge of sexual violence in conflict.


SOURCE UK Foreign & Commonwealth Office


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Saturday, May 17, 2014

Top Politicians and others Are Conniving With Boko Haram - Nigerian Military


The Nigeria Intelligence Agency and the Directorate of Military Intelligence have confirmed that top politicians are conniving withe the Boko Haram Islamic terrorists in northern Nigeria.

The source added that several soldiers had been killed because of misleading information from politicians, local communities and others with sympathy for the insurgents.

A security source said that the issue of connivance and betrayal by troops with sympathy for insurgents was one of the factors militating against the success of the operation.

It was gathered that soldiers were becoming uncomfortable because of series of ambush made possible by such elements, highly placed politicians and even the locals in the area who are supposed to be the beneficiaries of their presence.

Read full report on http://www.punchng.com/news/boko-haram-military-moves-against-sabotage-espionage/

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New Analysis on the Terrorist Group Boko Haram From the Bipartisan Policy Center


 WASHINGTON, May 15, 2014 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The Bipartisan Policy Center's (BPC) Homeland Security Project issued an analysis on the Nigerian terrorist group Boko Haram today. The horrific kidnapping of hundreds of Nigerian school girls has drawn international attention to and condemnation of Boko Haram. While the current crisis has brought a global focus on this dangerous group, they have been engaged in terrorist activities for a number of years. Carie Lemack, who has a decade of experience in homeland security and counterterrorism policy, provides a summary that appears below and originally published on BPC's blog today.

An assessment of the Nigerian terrorist group Boko Haram
By Carie Lemack

The horrific kidnapping of hundreds of Nigerian school girls has drawn international attention to and condemnation of Boko Haram. While the current crisis has brought a global focus on this dangerous group, they have been engaged in terrorist activities for a number of years.  In the Bipartisan Policy Center's September 2013 Threat Assessment, the Homeland Security Project identified previous deadly attacks perpetrated by the more than a decade-old organization and outlined their focus on creating Sharia law throughout Nigeria. 
Here are some key facts about the group that appear in BPC's report.

Boko Haram | Threat Assessment Since its creation in 2002, Boko Haram has only attacked international interests once, when it bombed the United Nations office in Abuja, Nigeria, in August 2011. The group has consistently shown little inclination or capacity for attacking Western targets and is principally interested in putting Nigeria under its version of sharia law. The organization is predominantly focused on withdrawing from  a society it sees as corrupt and beyond hope, and has constructed a "state within a state" with its own cabinet and religious police. Like a number of other militant groups, Boko Haram offers welfare handouts, food, and shelter to its followers, and uses the money it steals to pay the widows of slain members.

Activities Since 2010 On Christmas Eve 2010, at least six bombs were detonated near crowded churches and markets, killing dozens of people. Seventeen days later, on New Year's Eve, ten more people died when a bomb exploded in a popular open-air market. In the summer of 2011, the group detonated its first car bomb outside the national police headquarters in June and attacked the United Nations headquarters in Abuja in August, killing and wounding dozens.

In January 2012, Boko Haram launched coordinated attacks on the police headquarters and the offices of the Nigeria Immigration Service and the State Security Service in Kano, killing more than 200. The group's last major attack came in March of that year, when its followers burned down 12 public schools in Maiduguri and forced 10,000 students out of school. (Boko Haram, a derisive name given to the group by locals, means "Western education is forbidden.")

Since the 2012 attacks, Boko Haram has focused on a broad array of targets, including Christians, Nigerian security and police forces, the media, schools, and politicians, though the attacks are confined to northern Nigeria.

Al-Qaeda Affiliations According to Guardian correspondent and al-Qaeda expert Jason Burke, who was briefed on a letter that was recovered in the 2011 raid on bin Laden's compound in Abbottabad and that was not included in the 17 letters seized at the compound that were later publicly released, bin Laden had taken an interest in expanding al-Qaeda's operations to West Africa as far back as 2003 and was in direct contact with leaders of Boko Haram.

In July 2010, Abubakar Shekau, Boko Haram's leader, released a statement expressing solidarity with al-Qaeda and threatening the United States, but it does not appear al-Qaeda ever formalized the partnership. The group's main connection to al-Qaeda seems to be the funding it receives from AQIM.
Carie Lemack is the director of the Bipartisan Policy Center's Homeland Security Project. Previously, Lemack co-founded Global Survivors Network, a global organization for victims of terror to speak out against terrorism and radicalization. She coordinated and inspired events globally and produced an Academy Award-nominated documentary film, Killing in the Name. To receive updates from the project, subscribe to the quarterly newsletter here

Logo - http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20140514/87824

SOURCE Bipartisan Policy Center
CONTACT: Abbey Brandon, abrandon@bipartisanpolicy.org, (202) 218-6797


May 16, 2014

May 15, 2014


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Thursday, May 15, 2014

The Eccentric History of the Cannes Film Festival


The Eccentric History Of The Cannes Film Festival

Camera flashes, flashed bare chests, and flashy screen sirens give the Cannes Film Festival some of its je ne sais quoi, and that's why it's one of the favorite film fests. The inaugural ...


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Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Plan International Calls for Action on the Abduction of the Nigerian Schoolgirls



 Plan International CEO Nigel Chapman calls on the government of Nigeria to redouble its efforts to secure the immediate and unconditional release of all kidnapped schoolgirls. #bringbackourgirls (PRNewsFoto/Plan International ) 

 
WASHINGTON, May 13, 2014 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- "Plan International is extremely concerned that, nearly a month since the Nigerian schoolgirls were abducted, they and the other girls abducted a week ago still haven't been freed. As a children's rights organization, we strongly condemn the multiple violations of these girls' rights, including their right to education, their right to protection, and their right to survival and development.

Every child, including all girls, has the right to learn in a safe and secure environment and to reach their full potential. Education is key to lifting children, families, and their communities out of poverty, and to ensuring that they have a better future. No one should deny a child their right to education.
Every day, the rights of children all over the world, especially girls, are violated. Not all of these make the news, but they are just as significant in their own way.

Globally, one in five girls around the world is denied an education because of poverty, child marriage, discrimination, and violence. Not only is this unjust. It's also a huge waste of potential with serious global consequences. Supporting girls' education is one of the single best investments that can be made to help end poverty. Education transforms lives and this is why Plan launched its Because I am a Girl campaign on the first International Day of the Girl in 2012. This campaign supports four million girls to get the education, skills, and support they need to move themselves from poverty to opportunity. For over 75 years, Plan has been raising worldwide public awareness of the right to education and helped millions to reach their potential through its programs.

We therefore call on the government of Nigeria to redouble its efforts to secure the immediate and unconditional release of all the girls and their safe return. Furthermore, we urge world governments and the international community to support the Nigerian government in tracing and reunifying the girls with their families and communities. We encourage all relevant bodies to clearly and wholeheartedly condemn these abductions as gross violations of international human rights law and welcome the UN Security Council's action to that effect.

Each country's future is inextricably linked to the future of its children. These girls are the world's children and to the government of Nigeria we say, please bring our girls safely back home."

About Plan International
Founded over 75 years ago, Plan is one of the oldest and largest children's development organizations in the world.  The foundation of Plan's work is embedded in the Convention of the Rights of the Child, to which the large majority of countries are signatories.
We work in 50 developing countries across Africa, Asia, and the Americas to promote child rights and lift millions of children out of poverty. Plan is independent, with no religious, political, or governmental affiliations.

About Because I am a Girl
Because I am a Girl is a Plan's global effort to directly improve the lives of four million girls, impact more than 40 million girls and boys through gender-aware and gender-transformative programs, and make quantifiable policy changes for 400 million girls.  Because I am a Girl creates transformative and sustainable change by focusing on projects that specifically address the needs of the most marginalized and vulnerable girls in developing countries around the world.
Photo - http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20140513/87174
 
SOURCE Plan International
CONTACT: Meg Cangany, PR/Media Relations Officer, 202-617-2230, Meg.Cangany@PlanUSA.org

May 14, 2014

May 13, 2014

May 12, 2014

May 10, 2014


 
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Saturday, May 10, 2014

Timeline of Events On the Abduction of Chibok School Girls in Northern Nigeria

 Timeline of Events

This timeline, based on news reports, summarizes the events that followed the abduction of almost 300 girls in northern Nigeria. Check back for updates.

Monday, April 14
  • Residents of Chibok received phone calls on Monday night from residents in neighboring villages, who had seen convoys of vehicles (trucks, buses, motorcycles) with heavily armed militants heading toward Chibok (The Guardian).
  • They warned of an attack by Boko Haram (The Guardian).
  • The militants and the convoys arrived at Chibok around 9 p.m. and headed straight for the Girls Government Secondary School (CNN).
  • They engaged in gunfire with around 15 soldiers who were stationed at Chibok and the Girls Government Secondary School (The Guardian), killing two soldiers (CNN). The soldiers were outnumbered and reinforcements didn’t arrive (The Guardian).
  • The militants, who were dressed in Nigerian military uniforms according to escaped girls, then entered the buildings where the girls were sleeping (The New Yorker). They told the girls not to worry, that they were taking them to safety (The New Yorker). Some of the girls thought the men were Nigerian soldiers protecting them, but then realized the men were not when they shouted, “Allahu akbar” (Sydney Morning Herald).
  • Over 270 girls, who were mostly between 16 and 18 years old, were rounded up at gunpoint and loaded into the vehicles (The Guardian). According to the Guardian, the whole event lasted 5 hours, running into the early hours of Tuesday (The Guardian).
  • Some girls escaped that night, jumping off of trucks, grabbing onto swinging branches (The Telegraph), or running out of vehicles that were broken down (CNN).
  • The school was among the 85 secondary schools that the Borno state officials had closed since March because of attacks and threats by Boko Haram, but the girls had returned to take their final exams (NYTimes).
Tuesday, April 15
  • Small reports from BBC News and Associated Press about abduction. Very little information is known at the time. Reports say only 100 girls missing.
Wednesday, April 16
  • The Nigerian military stated: “Just eight of the 129 abducted school girls were still missing.” (CNN)
  • Major General Chris Olukolade stated that “One of the alleged attackers has been captured, and a military search-and-rescue operation is ongoing to ‘ensure the safety of the remaining students.’” (CNN)
  • “Soldiers and the Civilian Joint Task Force, as well as volunteers from the area, are now combing the forest to rescue the schoolgirls. They are aided by surveillance helicopters to locate the kidnappers' position.” (CNN)
Thursday, April 17
  • Conflicting with the Nigerian military, parents registered over 230 girls missing, a number much higher than reported by the government. (CNN)
  • On April 17, the Nigerian military retracted the report on the missing girls. The director of defense said the initial report was “not intended to deceive the public.” (CNN)
  • On Thursday and Friday, there were conflicting reports of how many girls were still missing and those who had managed to escape. Asabe Kwambura, principal of Government Girls Secondary School, stated 14 girls escaped and returned. Musa Inuwa Kubo, the Borno state education commissioner, said 30 girls had escaped.(CNN)
  • Parents made several attempts to venture into the “vast forests where militant camps are located – and where near-daily air raids by the Nigerian army have been halted since the kidnappings – many said they had little faith in the government.” (The Guardian)
April 23
  • First time #BringBackOurGirls is used on Twitter. At April 23 UNESCO World Book Capital City opening ceremonies, VP of World Bank Africa Oby Ezekwesil demanded the release of the girls, saying, “Bring back the girls.” Ibrahim M. Abdullahi tweeted the statement with #BringBackOurGirls and #BringBackOurDaughters. (Mashable)
April 28
  • Borno state governor said that eight more girls had escaped over the weekend, meaning a total 52 had fled. (BBC News)
April 29
  • Malala Yousafzai speaks with BBC Radio 4 about the abducted girls in Nigeria, calling the girls her sisters, and saying that every girl has a right to an education, that Boko Haram is abusing Islam, and that the international community must listen and must raise their voices. (BBC Radio 4)
April 30
  • New outlets reporting girls are being sold by Boko Haram for $12 and are being taken across border to Chad and Cameroon. (Washington Post)
  • Spike in international tweets mentioning #BringBackOurGirls in response to girls being sold as slaves. (Mashable)
  • One Million Women March in Abuja, Nigeria, including mothers and families of missing girls, women from Chibok, and hundreds of Nigerians in protest about government and military response. (The Guardian)
  • Petitions on Change.Org and the WhiteHouse.gov begin appearing to pressure U.S. and UN to send aid to Nigerian military. (Mashable)
May 1
  • Social media campaign takes off in U.S. with celebrities such as Mary J. Blige and Chris Brown tweeting to #BringBackOurGirls. It was tweeted 268,616 times on May 1. (Mashable)
May 3
  • John Kerry states that the U.S. will help in search for missing girls during a speech in Ethiopia, beginning the first official U.S. governmentt response to Nigeria. (Washington Post)
May 4
  • President Goodluck Jonathan makes statement vowing to find missing girls, three weeks after they were abducted. Jonathan is facing criticism from parents of missing girls, many Nigerians, and also international pressure. (TIME)
May 5
  • Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau publishes a video saying they kidnapped the girls and will sell them on international “human market.” (The Guardian)
  • Reports of 11 more girls kidnapped from two more Borno state villages, as well as reports that two girls had died of snake bites and 20 girls are ill. (Associated Press)
May 6
  • President Obama makes statement that the U.S will send help to the Nigerian military and government, including small team of advisors on military, hostage situations, and law enforcement. (TIME)
May 7
  • FLOTUS Michelle Obama posts to Twitter and Instagram a photo of her holding a #BringBackOurGirls sign, and it’s been retweeted 45,310 times so far. (ABC News)
  • Nigerian police offer $300,000 reward for information on location of girls. (LA Times)
  • As of May 7, #BringBackOurGirls has been tweeted 1.3 million times…and counting. (BBC News)
  • As of May 7, there have been over 30 protests worldwide against the abduction and government’s response, and in support of the missing girls and their families. Many more are planned for following weeks, with more being added daily across the globe. (Bring Back Our Girls)
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