Nigerian schoolgirls kidnapped by Boko Haram: protests but no rescue - Action News
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Nigerian schoolgirls kidnapped by Boko Haram: protests but no rescue

Protests marked the passage of six months since more than 200 schoolgirls were kidnapped by Boko Haram, and despite offers of international assistance, the Nigerian government has not mounted a rescue attempt or negotiated their release.

'Hope is now fading fast,' leader of parents group says

Demonstrators in Abuja, Nigeria, Oct. 14 call on the Nigerian government to rescue the schoolgirls kidnapped from Chibok. Scores of protesters marched, chanting "Bring Back Our Girls." The girls were kidnapped six months ago by Boko Haram. (Olamikan Gbemiga/Associated Press)

Chanting "Bring back our girls now, and alive," Nigerian protesters gathered outside the presidential residence in Abuja, the capital, on Tuesday.

They were demanding the Nigerian government do more to free the 200 or so schoolgirls still held captive by Boko Haram six months after the mass kidnapping from a school in Chibok, northern Nigeria.

Hosiah Lawan, a leader of the Chibok parents organization, told the crowd that, "hope is now fading fast," Reuters reported.

Protests also took place in London, U.K. and New York.

Boko Haram, which wants to form its own Islamic state, carried out the kidnapping at the girls school during the night of April 14-15. It's estimated that 276 students were abducted, but some have escaped - most recently, four of the girls turned up Sunday in Nigeria after walking for three weeks following their escape from captivity in neighbouring Cameroon.

About 200 are believed to still be in Boko Haram's clutches.

Held as slaves

In early May, Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekaustated in a videothat the students "will remain slaves with us."

Later that month, Nigeria's Chief of Defence Staff, Alex Badeh, claimed the girls had been located but ruled out a rescue as too dangerous. "We can't go and kill our girls in the name of trying to get them back."

Meanwhile, a global campaign pushing for the girls' release generated millions of tweetsusing the hashtag #BringBackOurGirls.The U.S. government and others offered to help.

Since then, there have been accounts of other abductions (including releases and escapes) and attacks by Boko Haram, as well as reports of back-channel talks between the group and the Nigerian government over the former's demand for the release of their jailed comrades in return for the girls.

Nevertheless, there has been no visible progress in the efforts to freethe girls.

Still no rescue attempt

How could a group, officially labelled "terrorist" by the U.S. government in 2013 and the U.N. Security Council in May 2014, succeed in holding so many people for six months?

Omolola Adele-Oso, a Nigerian living and working in the the U.S., points to "the ineptness of the Nigerian government when it comes to issues of public safety."

Omolola Adele-Oso of Act4Accountability points to the "the ineptness of the Nigerian government" when asked why the Chibok schoolgirls' abduction by Boko Haram continues. (Andrew Harnik)

She is one of the founders of the group Act4Accountability, which has helped lead the campaign in the west for the release of the Chibok schoolgirls. The group was started in May and brings together members of the African diaspora in the U.S.

Adele-Oso says there's frustration with the Nigerian government ona number of levels. "Keeping in touch with the family members of these missing girls is a basic, basic thing that needs to be done that's not happening."

She calls on the Goodluck Jonathan government to "at least tell us something.

"We're not hearing anything from the Nigerian government and, of course, when there's no response we assume you're really not doing all you need to," she adds.

She also angry about the president's re-election campaign using #BringBackGoodluck2015. The vote takes place in February.

War 'not going well'

Jonathan Hillteaches at King's College London and authoredthe 2012 bookNigeria since Independence: Forever Fragile?. He explains that "the unprecedented global campaign to find and free" theChibokschoolgirls was in part directed at the Nigerian government because, "The inexplicable withdrawal of the soldiers guarding the school from which they were taken, Abujas reluctant and week-late admission that they had been kidnapped, and the security forces' abject failure to pursue what leads they had in a timely fashion gave rise to serious doubts about the federal governments competence and desire to save the girls."

According to Hill,"The war againstBokoHaramis not going well," further hampering attempts to secure the return of the girls.
Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan is using #BringBackGoodluck2015 for his re-election campaign, angering some protesters who want his government to do more to free the kinapped schoolgirls. (Sunday Alamba/Associated Press)

"BokoHaramis not on the cusp of defeat, but continues to mount attacks and evolve," Hill wrotefor theCombatting TerrorismCenter atWestPointat the end of July.

In the past few months Boko Haram has changed tactics so that it is now holding onto towns it targets, rather than simply carrying out hit-and-run attacks.The group is reported to be responsible for the killing of 3,000 people in Nigeria this year.

Hill writes that, "BokoHaramsability to exploit national borders has enabled its leaders and forces to plan, prepare and recuperate in relative safety, and avoid detection and neutralization by Nigerias security forces."

He also notes a growing influence over Boko Haram by al-Qaeda in the Maghreb.

The U.S. tries to step up

Singer-songwriter Alicia Keys, second from right, joins protesters with the "Bring Back Our Girls" campaign marking the six month anniversary of the kidnapping of Nigerian schoolgirls by Boko Haram militants, in front of the Nigerian consulate in New York, Oct. 14. (Kathy Willens/Associated Press)

The White House marked the six-month anniversary of the mass kidnapping by issuing a statement saying, "President Obama has directed that the U.S. government do everything it can to help the Nigerian government find and free the abducted girls and, more broadly, to combat Boko Haram."

Their goal: "to dismantle this murderous group."

The statement also provides details about the U.S. effort, which includessending "a multi-disciplinary team" to advise the Nigerian government,providing them with "intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance," and a new $40 million fund for for Cameroon, Chad, Niger, and Nigeria to help counter Boko Haram.

Adele-Oso welcomes the U.S. assistance, but says "their hands are tied, they can only offer -it's up to the Nigerian government as to what they want to accept."

Hill says, "It is not entirely clear why Abuja is unwilling to work more closely with either the United States or the United Kingdom. Likelyreasons include national pride and a possible reluctance to expose the Nigerian militarys operating practices to closer scrutiny."

Police women in riot gear block the route during a demonstration Oct. 14 in Abuja, Nigeria, calling on the government to rescue the kidnapped schoolgirls. (Olamikan Gbemiga/Associated Press)

Hill adds that, "Certainly Nigerias army has been heavily criticized on occasion for its heavy and indiscriminate use of force."

Meanwhile, those pushing for the release of the kidnapped girls are maintaining pressure on the Nigerian government.Adele-Oso says Act4Accountability will continue to "speak up and show up at the Nigerian embassy or places where Nigerian delegates are gathering."

"Until these girls are brought back, the pressure is kept on the Nigerian government to make sure it does what it is supposed to do."

With files from Reuters