*US may deploy drones to rescue Chibok girls
*Obama family ‘outraged’
*UNSC to sanction sect
*Jonathan begs Nigerians
By Henry Umoru and Daudu Olatunji
“Boko Haram should be eliminated at the maximum of three months”.
With these words, northern governors expressed their expectation from the Federal Government and the international community that the insurgency spearheaded by the Boko Haram Islamist group should end within three months.
The governors spoke on a day the US First Lady, Michelle Obama, said her family was “outraged and heartbroken” over the more than 200 girls abducted by Boko Haram in Chibok, Borno State on April 14.
Also, yesterday, a senior US official said Washington was considering a Nigerian request for surveillance aircraft to join the search for the abducted girls.
The UN Security Council expressed outrage over the kidnapping, saying it would consider “appropriate measures” against Boko Haram.
The US is seeking to have UN sanctions imposed on the Islamist group.
These developments came on the heels of the arrival in Nigeria, on Friday, of a small number of the US and British experts to assist in the efforts to rescue the abducted girls.
NORTHERN GOVERNORS
Governor Babangida Aliyu of Niger State, who is also the Chairman of Northern State Governors Forum (NSGF), said, yesterday, that with the efforts against Boko Haram, insurgency by the Islamist group should end within three months.
Aliyu, speaking at the end of the NSGF and the Nigeria Embassy Washington DC, USA Investment Forum, held at Sheraton Hotel and Towers, Abuja, said, “Boko Haram should be eliminated at the maximum of three months. That is the expectation of the northern states from the Federal Government and the international community.”
According to him, all hands ought to be on deck to end the Boko Haram insurgency.
The governor’s words: “The current challenges facing our country demonstrates the importance of working together across geo-political zones, political party lines, and ethnic-religious affinities to defeat our common enemies – poverty and corruption, which, unfortunately, continue to undermine our efforts in taking our rightful place as the giant of Africa. We can no longer remain the sleeping giant. And the time for a paradigm shift is certainly now.
“We are under no illusions that achieving this will be easy, especially in a fast changing information age. We also believe that progress in any form comes with a price. Expectedly, as life gets better it certainly gets tougher, with emerging challenges and pressures that sometimes threaten to uproot communities and families from their established ways of life. We, however, believe we have a shared responsibility and morality as Governors of the Northern States to pursue programmes and policies that promote social justice, peace and security, which is the fundamental essence of governance.”
The meeting, which had in attendance the United States Ambassador to Nigeria, James Ent Whistle, the Nigerian Ambassador to the United States, Prof. Adewale Ibidapo Adefuye, some governors, deputy governors, key investors from Nigeria and the United States, was aimed at “creating opportunities for economic prosperity and security in the northern states and the nation in a period of unprecedented insecurity challenges.”
JONATHAN BEGS NIGERIANS
Meanwhile, President Goodluck Jonathan, yesterday, begged Nigerians to join him in the fight against Boko Haram insurgency.
Jonathan stated this at a luncheon party to mark the 80th birthday of the Awujale of Ijebuland, Oba Sikiru Kayode Adetona, held at Otunba Dipo Dina International Stadium, Ijebu-Ode, Ogun State.
The President, who was represented by his Chief of Staff, Gen. John Arogbofa (rtd). disclosed that his absence was as a result of the insecurity problems facing the country.
In his key note address, Jonathan said: “We all know that the nation is facing some challenges today and these are challenges we are all worried about, that concerns everyone of us and, because of that, it has not been possible for Mr President to come because there are visitors from outside the country with whom he has to share some views on how this problem can be resolved.
“I want to plead with all of us that these are challenges that we are all faced with, they are challenges that all of us should gather together to resolve”.
Mrs Obama’s unusual broadcast
US First Lady Michelle Obama, yesterday, said the mass kidnap of the Chibok girls was part of a wider pattern of threats and intimidation facing girls around the world who pursue education.
She said she and her husband Barack Obama were “outraged and heartbroken” over the abduction.
She was speaking instead of her husband in the weekly presidential address.
Mrs Obama, who was speaking ahead of Mother’s Day in the US today, said the girls reminded her and her husband of their own daughters.
“What happened in Nigeria was not an isolated incident.
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