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Leah Sharibu: The Forgotten Daughter Of Nigeria
Leah Sharibu: The Forgotten Daughter Of Nigeria
By Ugochukwu Ejinkeonye
The New Year is almost here with us. And as Nigerians try to survive the harrowing ordeal which living in their country has become and remain painfully stuck with a regime that neither offers them any hope nor guarantees their freedom; as they count the days in the hope that the months and years would run faster to bring them quickly to a happy of end their nightmare, they should try and muster the strength to remember that a 15-year old, tender, innocent girl called Leah Sharibu remains a hapless, pathetic, traumatised captive of Boko Haram, obviously, under the most dehumanising conditions.
Given what has, reportedly, been the horrible experiences of young, beautiful girls like her who had had the unspeakable misfortune of being captured by these terrorists, one is really scared to imagine what Leah might have been subjected to for nearly two years now.
Most painful is that she hardly gets mentioned again these days by those whose job it is to rescue and bring her home!
Has Nigeria forgotten her then? Has President Buhari who may have Leah’s age mates as grandchildren forgotten her? Has he given up hope of ever bringing her home again to her heartbroken parents? What happened to the president’s very loud promises to rescue her quickly? Or even his firm pledge during the campaigns for his first term that he would end the Boko Haram menace in six months and ensure the freedom of all their captives?
What did he have in mind to do when he was making those promises? Has he executed those plans and what was the result? Or was he merely dropping the promises like overripe fruits (just to win the people’s votes) which he probably no longer remembers, let alone making any attempts to fulfill?
Leah was among the 110 students of the Government Girls’ Science and Technical College, Dapchi, Yobe State, abducted by Boko Haram terrorists on February 19, 2018.
She was only 14. When in March news broke that the terrorists had brought back the girls with the same fanfare they had taken them away like kids going on an excursion, Leah’s parents rejoiced like the other parents, and rushed down to embrace their beloved child and take her home.
But on discovering that her child was not released with her classmates, Leah’s mother, Rebecca Sharibu, fainted. The shock was too much for her.
Speaking of her experience later, she said, weeping profusely: “My heart was broken when I searched through the released girls and could not set my eyes on my dear daughter, Leah”.
Leah’s equally traumatized father, Nathaniel Sharibu, could only sorrowfully plead that serious effort should be deployed to bring his daughter back: “Nigeria must do all within its powers to bring back my daughter the same way they did to others.”
After nearly two years now and no heartwarming news had come in about his beloved daughter, the only girl in the family, his conclusion would probably be that he merely sang ballads to the deaf!
Leah’s classmates who were released had reported that terrorists had refused to release her because she is a Christian and had refused to renounce her faith and convert to Islam as demanded by the terrorists. That was her offence which she has been paying dearly for.
Her heart must have bled as she watched the other girls go home, but she remained firm in her resolve not to trade her faith with her freedom. If she is still alive (and we believe she is), there is no doubt that she is still firm and unbending about her faith.
How does Leah see Nigeria and her leaders today? An American boy would look you straight in the face and declare that he is ready to die for America any day and anywhere, and he means every word he uttered.
Same goes for youths from several other countries. Why? They know very well that should any of them be in trouble any day or anywhere, their country would spare no resources and efforts to rescue them.
They also trust in the ability of their country to get them out of harm’s way despite the circumstances that might have brought them into their predicament. Their leaders are patriotic and humane and sincerely love and care for the people they are governing.
They are not the callous and selfish type who only remember the likes of Leah when they want to use their predicament to score cheap political points or when they are canvassing for votes.
On Saturday, June 23, 2018, a young football team in Thailand, made up of 12 boys between the ages of 11 and 16, went missing with their coach in a Northern Thailand cave. The world stood in awe as their country went all out to trace and bring them home.
Nobody bothered to ask why they embarked on such an adventure. That was no longer necessary. The most important thing was their safety. The whole country and their leaders united in their resolve to rescue the boys and gave themselves no rest until they were found and brought back to safety.
The dedication and concern of the Thai leaders aroused the sympathy of the world which moved in to help.
In other countries, the worsening insecurity in the land and the fact that many of our citizens were either in captivity or brutally displaced were enough reasons for President Buhari to excuse himself from a second term contest.
But in these parts, people seek power not to serve the citizenry, but largely to gratify some self-serving interests. So, even if they run the country completely aground, they would still seek another term, even if it would mean to return to play the undertaker. The verdict of history holds no attraction for them.
So, as Buhari campaigned for a second term, Leah’s hot tears continued to flow. Each day, she looked out for the rescue team that was yet to even take off.
Sense of loneliness and abandonment became her daily sources of torments. May be, our leaders are wishing that we should forget Leah and move on – like they seem to have done with the Chibok girls. After deftly deploying their horrible plight to great effect to win the election in 2015, they are yet demonstrate that they possess the capacity to bring them home. I even wonder if that is still a priority!
During the last general elections, it was as if nothing else mattered in Nigeria again. As Boko Haram captured more communities, all we heard was INEC’s assurances that it would still conduct elections in those areas.
That was what was important to them, not necessarily the liberation of the people whose lands had been violated and annexed. In some of the places, aid agencies were no longer able to access the people trapped here and there with food and medical supplies.
Poorly motivated and ill-equipped soldiers were being killed with chilling frequency by better armed terrorists. The country under a retired general seemed to have relinquished the monopoly it ought to exercise over the instruments of violence and coercion.
Nigerians, therefore, became lame ducks before bandits who brazenly abducted, killed and rendered them homeless with chilling rapidity and utmost impunity – as if government was on recess.
Now that the elections are over and the much-coveted second term has been secured, so, what is the update on Leah Sharibu? Is she going to once again see the end of another year in painful captivity?
Is Leah Sharibu the forgotten daughter of Nigeria? Why should this country expect her youths to develop patriotic spirits when the government is making it sink into them with its treatment of Leah Sharibu, Chibok Girls and several others still in activity that their lives do not really matter or matter only very little?
Would the parents of those still in captivity smile into the New Year or embrace it with bitter tears, sorrow and deep pains? Over to you, Mr. President.
About the author: Ugochukwu Ejinkeonye is a Nigerian journalist and writer ([email protected])