Marshal Alex Badeh |
Nigeria's defense chief is claiming that the
country’s military has located nearly 300 schoolgirls abducted by Islamic
extremists but cannot go in with force to free them.
Air Marshal Alex Badeh told demonstrators supporting
the country's much criticized military on Monday that Nigerian troops can save
the girls, according to The Associated Press. But he added, "we can't go
and kill our girls in the name of trying to get them back."
He spoke to thousands of demonstrators who marched
to Defense Ministry headquarters in Abuja, the capital. Many were brought in on
buses, indicating it was an organized event.
Asked by reporters where they had found the girls,
Badeh refused to elaborate.
A senior U.S. defense official who spoke to Fox News
also said that the reports cannot be independently confirmed.
"We want our girls back. I can tell you we can
do it. Our military can do it. But where they are held, can we go with
force?" Badeh asked the crowd.
People roared back, "No!"
"If we go with force what will happen?" he
asked.
"They will die," the demonstrators said.
Badeh said no one should criticize the military.
"Nobody should come and say the Nigerian
military does not know what it is doing. We know what we are doing," he
insisted.
Nigeria's military and government have faced
national and international outrage over their failure to rescue the girls
seized by Boko Haram militants from a remote northeastern school six weeks ago.
President Goodluck Jonathan was forced this month to
accept international help. American planes have been searching for the girls
and Britain, France, Israel and other countries have sent experts in
surveillance and hostage negotiation.
Jonathan's reluctance to accept offered help for
weeks is seen as unwillingness to have outsiders looking in on what is
considered a very corrupt force.
Soldiers have told The Associated Press that they
are not properly paid, are dumped in dangerous bush with no supplies and that
the Boko Haram extremists holding the girls are better equipped than they are.
Some soldiers have said officers enriching
themselves off the defense budget have no interest in halting the five-year-old
uprising that has killed thousands.
Soldiers near mutiny earlier this month fired on the
car of a commanding officer come to pay his respects to the bodies of 12
soldiers who their colleagues said were unnecessarily killed by the insurgents
in a night-time ambush.
The military also is accused of killing thousands of
detainees held illegally in their barracks, some by shooting, some by torture
and many starved to death or asphyxiated in overcrowded cells.
More than 300 teenagers were abducted from their
school in the town Chibok on April 15. Police say 53 escaped on their own and
276 remain captive.
A Boko Haram video has shown some of the girls
reciting Koranic verses in Arabic and two of them explaining why they had
converted from Christianity to Islam in captivity. Unverified reports have
indicated two may have died of snake bites, that some have been forced to marry
their abductors and that some may have been carried across borders into Chad
and Cameroon.
Boko Haram -- the nickname means "Western
education is sinful" -- believes Western influences have corrupted
Nigerian society and want to install an Islamic state under strict Shariah law,
though the population 170 million people is divided almost equally between
Christians and Muslims.
Na Mwanaharakati.
No comments:
Post a Comment