Some Of Nigeria's Missing Girls May Never Return: Ex-President

Started by HuffingtonPost, Jun 13, 2014, 03:31 PM

HuffingtonPost



ABUJA, June 13 (Reuters) - Nigeria's former president  Olusegun Obasanjo told media some of the schoolgirls kidnapped  by militant group Boko Haram in April may never return, in the  most pessimistic comments yet on their fate from a member of the  political elite.                

Obasanjo said President Goodluck Jonathan's administration  had taken too long to respond to the mass abduction. Once  Jonathan's mentor and one of his strongest political allies,  Obasanjo turned against him in December.                

"I believe that some of them will never return. We will  still be hearing about them many years from now," Obasanjo told  the BBC's Hausa-language radio service on Thursday, in comments  echoed in an interview with Nigeria's Premium Times website.                

The warning from Obasanjo, who stepped down in 2007 but  remains an influential figure, will dismay parents who have now  waited 60 days for any news of their daughters, taken from a  school in the village of Chibok on April 14.                

Obasanjo's criticisms underline divisions within Jonathan  and Obasanjo's ruling People's Democratic Party, heightened by  the government and army's failure to rescue the girls, and by  presidential elections due in 2015.                

"If you get all of them back, I will consider it a  near-miracle ... Do you think they (Boko Haram) will hold all of  them together up till now? The logistics for them to do that,  holding over 200 girls together, is too much," Obasanjo said,  according to Premium Times.                

"If the administration had acted quickly, we could have  rescued them," he said.                

Obasanjo, twice president and a powerful political godfather  who nurtured Jonathan's own rise to power, has progressively  fallen out with the current president. In a letter leaked in  December he said it would be "morally flawed" for Jonathan to  seek a second term in a 2015 poll.     (Reporting by Andrew Heavens; Editing by Alexandra Hudson)
Source: huffingtonpost.com