Goodluck Jonathan - Visit To Chibok Will Not Bring Back Our Girls


President Goodluck Jonathan has put aside visiting Chibok community, where over 200 female students of a state-owned secondary school were abducted over a month ago, at the moment, insisting that the visit will not “solve the problem”.
Responding to a journalist during the Africa Security Summit in Paris, President Jonathan said “if the president goes to Chibok today, it does not solve any problem; may be psychological problem or for media relevance. But you have not solved the problem” insisting that “the problem facing the president and indeed the Nigerian government is how to get this girls from where they are” he said.
President Jonathan, who noted that “these girls are from a particular school, but there are a lot of misconceptions; these girls have been removed from the school” insisted that “visiting the school per se does not solve the problem”.


“They (girls) are not from one family, they are scattered from a particular local government area, which is made up of so many communities. So there is no one family that you will go and visit” he said.
Though a state owned school, President Jonathan maintained that it remains the “commitment of the federal government to rebuild that school and provide facilities to protect it since it is a school that predominantly takes care of school education so that the girls will be protected”.
He however noted that he will visit Chibok “no doubt about that” but noted that it is unlike the some bomb blast situations where he visited the scenes, insisting that “our interest now is to locate the girls; to know where they are. These girls are not held in Chibok”
There had been widespread criticism over the cancellation of the president’s visit to Chibok one month after the girls were abducted.
President Jonathan also dismissed allegations that Cameroon have not been helpful in the fight against Boko Haram insurgents, insisting that “Nigeria has a robust relationship with Cameroon”.
He further stated that Cameroon has intercepted some weapons targeted at Nigerians. He maintained that Nigeria has been unable to pursue the insurgents, who mostly attack communities that are close to the Cameroonian border, because of existing international laws which demands that permission be sought from the country.

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