Skip to main content

12 years on, parents renew call for rescue of 87 Chibok girls


Twelve years after the abduction of 276 schoolgirls from Chibok, Borno State, parents of the victims have renewed calls for urgent and coordinated global action to secure the release of those still in captivity.

In an open letter issued at the weekend, the parents appealed to the federal government, the international community and the United Nations to intensify efforts towards rescuing the remaining girls, noting that 87 of them are still unaccounted for.

The statement, signed by Yana Galang and Zanna Lawan on behalf of the parents of the missing girls, described the continued absence of the victims as a painful reminder of promises yet to be fulfilled since the April 14, 2014, abduction.

The Chibok schoolgirls’ abduction, which sparked global outrage and advocacy for the protection of girls’ education, remains one of the most defining incidents of insurgency in Nigeria’s North-East.

While acknowledging that some of the girls have been released or rescued over the years, the parents lamented that progress has been slow and incomplete.

“For the families, this is not a past tragedy but an ongoing reality,” the statement read, stressing that the passage of time has done little to ease the anguish and uncertainty surrounding the fate of their daughters.

They urged the Nigerian government to not only sustain but strengthen ongoing efforts to locate the missing girls, insisting on the need for accountability in the rescue process.

“We want to once again passionately call on the Nigerian government to sustain and strengthen efforts to locate the missing girls and to ensure accountability,” the parents said.

The group also called on the United Nations and other international partners to keep the Chibok case on the global agenda and support initiatives aimed at protecting children, particularly girls, in conflict-affected regions.

Describing the incident as more than a national concern, the parents said it represents “a test of global resolve”, warning that the responsibility to act must not diminish with time.

They further demanded coordinated and transparent actions, including sustained search operations and broader strategies to guarantee safe access to education, especially for girls in vulnerable communities.

The parents cautioned against allowing the Chibok abduction to fade into obscurity, insisting that the missing girls must not become “a symbol without consequence”.

They maintained that the crisis remains unresolved until all the abducted girls are accounted for, urging sustained commitment from all stakeholders to bring closure to affected families.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

JUST IN: If Tinubu Had Told Me, I Wouldn’t Have Agreed To Rivers State Of Emergency Rule – Wike

The Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom Wike, has stated that he would not have agreed with President Bola Ahmed Tinubu if he had discussed his move to declare a State of Emergency in Rivers State. Wike noted that he is not in conflict with the suspended Rivers State Governor,      Sim Fubara  He stressed his opposition on the State of Emergency rule, stating that only the President knows the right time to lift it. While speaking to journalists in Abuja on Monday, Wike remarked that Fubara has permitted himself to be manipulated by his adversaries to oppose him. The FCT Minister said: “ I made it clear that this impunity will not stand, so what is happening in PDP is what I call undertakers because I see no reason why you will put yourself under that kind of crisis. “I don’t have any crisis with him (Fubara). I’m not the President who declared a State of Emergency; if Mr President had called me, I wouldn’t have agreed to the State of Emergenc...

Woman Burned to Death, Accused of Kidnapping 7yrs Old Boy in Delta

By Tessy ogbemi An angry mob set ablaze a woman accused in a failed child kidnapping attempt in Agbarho community, Ughelli North Local Government Area of Delta State.  The incident happened on Wednesday, September 24, 2025.  An eyewitness disclosed at the scene of the incident at Ekwvere Road claimed that the woman hid the seven year old boy she allegedly abducted in a sack, adding that she was even carrying a Bible on one hand.  Community sources said some residents in the area accosted the lady when they observed the way she was dragging the sack, to know what she had in it.  "She was unstable when they asked her to disclose what she was carrying in the sack. When the bag was forced open, they found a seven year old child in it. They shouted and it attracted a large crowd,” a source said.  It was gathered that the angry mob immediately brought a used tyre to the scene, which they forced down her neck after beating her to a pulp.  “The lady and the tyre we...

Breaking: ASUU suspends 2-week warning strike

The Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, has suspended its two-week warning strike it declared last week across all public universities in the country. The union announced the suspension on Wednesday at a press conference held at its headquarters in Abuja. President of ASUU, Chris Piwuna, who read a prepared speech before newsmen, explained that the development followed intervention by the Senate and some other well-meaning Nigerians. However, he sad the National Executive Council of the Union resolved to give the government a one-month window to address all contending areas.