“What is the point of bringing them home if we as their parents can’t see them?” said one of the fathers, who asked not to be identified. A mother accused the government of “deliberately breaking our hearts in this festive period”.
The girls were not given permission either to attend Christmas mass, angering Chibok residents as well as their relatives.
“We are a community and we take these girls as ours whether they are related to us or not,” said local resident Ayuba Alamson. A spokesman for the presidency Garba Shehu said in a statement late Tuesday that the officers in charge of protecting the girls had misinterpreted their instructions.
“There were some hitches arising from a lack of understanding of the objective of the trip on the part of some security operatives,” he said, adding that instructions have “been given from headquarters for access by the parents to be eased”.
Several dozens of girls are still in captivity and those freed are watched over. Their capture had sparked a global Twitter campaign under the hashtag #BringBackOurGirls.
The Punch
Our goverment are the problem nigeria is having .the truth is always bitter .all the same thanks to God.May God also help the others
ReplyDeleteOur goverment are the problem nigeria is having .the truth is always bitter .all the same thanks to God.May God also help the others
ReplyDelete