The former Vice President of the World Bank, who led protesters to
the presidential villa in Aso Rock, Abuja last Thursday, described the
president’s response, made on his behalf by one of his Ministers, as
insensitive.
It could be recalled that the protest planned to end
at the presidential villa was blocked by security operatives, forcing
the protesters to deliver a letter of protest they wanted to give Mr. Jonathan to a delegation made up of senior members of the government.
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It was gathered that the Minister of State for the Federal Capital
Territory, Olajumoke Akinjide told the campaigners that the president
asked them to direct their protests to the Boko Haram sect.
While
commenting on the matter via her Twitter account, Mrs Ezekwesili said
the president’s response shows him as a man avoiding his responsibility
as Nigeria’s leader.
She tweeted: “Regrettably, the response of
our president’s delegation, delivered by Oloye Akinjide- Minister of
state for FCT was underwhelming and inadequate.
“Should those insensitive and responsibility avoiding words be the
message of our president, then I am afraid, Nigeria/Nigerians are in
trouble.
“I choose to believe our president did not say those
awful things that were read to us concerning citizens’ demand to
#BringBackOurGirls.
“Facts are that regardless of afterthoughts
that we are now being served by federal government, the institutional
response to their fate was indifference.
“It was only after our
social media campaign migrated to street marches- chibok women on
29thApril and #bringbackourgirls on 30th – that we saw motion.
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“Our pressure on the federal government to act – high priority,
coherent, sustained, swift and goal/result specific rescue operation –
seems to irritate govt.
“We are clear minded that the pressure we
have mounted on the federal government to act is singularly in the
interest of #chibokgirls, there’s no stopping."
As at the time of compiling this report, the presidency is yet to respond to Mrs Ezekwesili's statement.
It
is worthy to note that more than a month after over 276 schoolgirls
were abducted by the Boko Haram sect at the Government Girls Secondary
School in Chibok, Borno State on 14 April, 2014, the girls are yet to
regain freedom.
READ MORE: http://news.naij.com/66964.html
READ MORE: http://news.naij.com/66964.html
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