International pressure on Nigeria is mounting with protesters taking
to the streets around the world to demand the rescue of hundreds of
schoolgirls abducted by the terror group Boko Haram.
From Los Angeles to
London, demonstrators carried posters reading #BringBackOurGirls -- a
campaign that began on Twitter following the mass abduction of the girls
in April -- and chanted "Bring them home!," "Not for sale!" and
"African lives matter!"
The protests on Saturday
came the same day that U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry called on
Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan to step up efforts to find the
girls who were abducted April 16 from a school in Chibok, in the
country's rural northeast.
In Washington, protesters
gathered at the Lincoln Memorial to denounce what they described as a
poor response by the Nigerian government to rescue the girls.
Nigerians protest over kidnapped schoolgirls
Police: 223 abducted girls still missing
Nigerian father: We know where our girls are
Nigerian dad: 'We lost our daughter'
Among them was Oluwa Tosin Adegobla, who cried even as she demanded action.
"When you touch kids, I
think you've gone too far, especially, when it's kids trying to get an
education," said Adegobla, who was born in Nigeria. "... We're getting
very little information about what the federal government is actually
doing to mobilize a search for those girls."
She criticized the Nigerian President for what she described as a lack of response.
The President's press office announced Saturday that Jonathan will deliver a nationwide address on the issue on Sunday.
Outcry from angry Nigerians
In Nigeria, angry
citizens contend authorities are not doing enough. They took to social
media using hashtags #BringBackOurGirls and #BringBackOurDaughters to
demand more from the government, a move that appears to have ignited a
global call for action.
Despite the recent public outcries, the Nigeria's Defense Ministry said it is committed to the search.
Even so, protesters have said not enough is being done.
"It irks me that the
government is not doing enough to bring back our girls and curb this
insurgency,' said Iheanyi Onwubiko to CNN's iReport from Abuja, Nigeria.
Onwubiko joined the online protest movement because of a personal connection to one of the kidnapped girls.
The African Union issued
a statement on Friday expressing "support to the efforts being made to
rescue the abducted girls and bring to justice the perpetrators of this
abhorrent act" and "solidarity with the anguished families."
The statement echoed other groups' concerns.
"Can you imagine if 234
girls were abducted from their school in Paris or in Chicago? This would
be a nightmare, this would be an uproar," Nicole Lee, president of
TransAfrica, an African-American foreign policy organization, said at
the Washington demonstration.
"... People would care, people would take action and we would want the same for the girls in Nigeria."
During Kerry's televised
comment, made during a visit to Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, he called on the
government to bring those responsible to justice.
"The kidnapping of
hundreds of children by Boko Haram is an unconscionable crime, and we
will do everything possible to support the Nigerian government to return
these young women to their homes and to hold the perpetrators to
justice," he said.
Boko Haram's name translates to "Western education is a sin" in the local language.
The group especially
opposes the education of women. Under its version of Sharia law, women
should be at home raising children and looking after their husbands, not
at school learning to read and write.
Convoy disappears with hundreds of school girls
According to accounts,
armed members of Boko Haram overwhelmed security guards at the all-girls
schools, herded the girls out of bed and forced them into trucks in the
town of Chibok. The convoy of trucks then disappeared into the dense
forest bordering Cameroon.
On Friday, Nigerian
authorities updated the number of girls kidnapped to 276. At least 53 of
the girls escaped, leaving 223 in the hands of their captors, police
said.
Authorities said that the new figure for missing girls -- 223 -- could grow as police fill in spotty school enrollment records.
Meanwhile, the U.S.
State Department warned citizens against traveling to Nigeria because of
a "fluid and unpredictable" security situation. The government of
Nigeria has issued a state of emergency in the northeastern Nigerian
states of Adamawa, Yobe and Borno, where the mass abduction of the girls
occurred.
At the same time, the
U.S. Consulate in Nigeria warned citizens to stay away from the Sheraton
Hotel near the city of Lagos because of continued terror threats.
"As of late April,
groups associated with terrorism allegedly planned to mount an
unspecified attack against the Sheraton Hotel in Nigeria, near the city
of Lagos. There was no further information regarding which of the two
Sheraton Hotels in Lagos was the possible target, or if both of the
Sheraton Hotels are possible targets," the statement reads.
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