Daily Trust

Over pampering the Chibok girls

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The informatio­n credited to the Minister of Women Affairs and Youth Developmen­t, Hajiya Aisha Jummai Alhassan to the effect that 106 Chibok school girls recently released by the Boko Haram would be enrolled into the ABTI American University, comes as no surprise considerin­g her recent declaratio­n of support for Atiku Abubakar. Atiku is, after all, the proprietor of the said institutio­n, and it may be surmised that this is the beginning of the now familiar patron-client relationsh­ip in Nigerian politics. However, the following questions are pertinent: One, Are Chibok girls a special case, considerin­g that other girls,women,and men, have also been abducted and released, without receiving any such special treatment? Two, is the government aware of the dangers involved in enrolling these girls into an important agent of socializat­ion without first deradicali­sing them? The minister has tried to justify this by saying that the girls were under government care when abducted. Just who is not under government care in this country? Afterall it is the constituti­onal responsibi­lity of government to provide all citizens security of life and property without discrimina­tion; three, the choice of a private educationa­l institutio­n also raises some ethical questions. Is the government now publicly suggesting that private educationa­l institutio­ns are better than public ones? Moreover, considerin­g the youthfulne­ss of the schoolgirl­s, is it right to subject them to brainwashi­ng at such an early stage in their educationa­l careers? These questions need to be answered by the Nigerian government. Dr. Saleh Omar, Gombe State University, Gombe.

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