Wife of Nigeria’s President, Oluremi Tinubu, and Amnesty International (AI) have ‘exploded’ at the kidnappers of women and school children in Northern Nigeria and urged the Federal Government to safely rescue the victims.
While Tinubu described kidnappers as cowards who deserve capital punishment, Amnesty called on the Federal Government to secure the safe release of over 687 people who were abducted by gunmen in Borno and Kaduna states.
From Gamboru-Ngala and Dikwa local government areas of Borno State, suspected Boko Haram terrorists abducted more than 400 persons including women and children from the Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camps in Gamboru Ngala, Babban Sansani, Zulum, and Arabic settlements.
Also read
- Kidnapping: Four of Ariyo family Regain freedom
- Kidnapping: Two female prospective NYSC members released
- Kidnapping: Court sends Father of seven to death gallows
No fewer than 287 schoolchildren were kidnapped after gunmen stormed the LEA Primary and Secondary School in Kuriga village of Chikun Local Government Area of Kaduna State.
You are cruel- Tinubu ‘explodes’ at kidnappers
Reacting to the incidents in a statement on Friday, Tinubu said, “Whoever is kidnapping young people is sick, cruel, and a coward.
“Enough is enough and I call on the state governors that once we take hold of them, they deserve capital punishment.
“Why don’t they take people their size? Why are they torturing our children? What they are trying to do is kill our future.
“We all know parents, when we are old we rely on our children.
“Why would you go and take them from schools? Right now, I think enough is enough. As a former lawmaker, I believe that any one of them captured deserves capital punishment.
“They (kidnappers) are animals, they are evil and we should take them out of our midst.
“The state governors and the lawmakers should do something.”
Tinubu said, “Whoever is kidnapping young people is sick, cruel, and a coward.
“Enough is enough and I call on the state governors that once we take hold of them, they deserve capital punishment.
“Why don’t they take people their size? Why are they torturing our children? What they are trying to do is kill our future.
“We all know parents, when we are old we rely on our children.
“Why would you go and take them from schools? Right now, I think enough is enough. As a former lawmaker, I believe that any one of them captured deserves capital punishment.
“They (kidnappers) are animals, they are evil and we should take them out of our midst.
“The state governors and the lawmakers should do something.”
Rescue them safely- Amnesty tells FG
Similarly, the Director of Amnesty International Nigeria, Isa Sanusi, said the kidnappings are a “shocking indictment of the authorities’ persistent failure to protect people from attacks by armed groups that have killed thousands of Nigerians in the last five years”.
Amnesty wants the “Nigerian government to take all necessary measures to ensure the safe release and return of those abducted to their families.
“Authorities must also promptly, thoroughly, impartially, independently, effectively, and transparently investigate the recurring cases of abductions in many parts of the country, make public the findings of any investigation, and ensure that the suspected perpetrators are brought to justice in fair trials.”
The group took a swipe at the Nigerian government over its perceived failure to end the continuous attacks by gunmen across the country.
It argued that the latest incident has exposed the current administration as having no plan to end the spate of violence and attacks by armed groups.
According to Amnesty International, the current approach adopted by President Bola Tinubu’s administration is not working.
“The latest mass abductions clearly show President Bola Tinubu and his government have no effective plan for ending years of atrocities by armed groups and gunmen that are increasingly having a free reign across many parts of Nigeria.
“Whatever security measures are being implemented by President Tinubu and his government are clearly not working.
“Given the rising level of insecurity in Nigeria today, it is obvious that protecting lives and property is low on the list of government priorities. People should not be left to live in fear of the next attack or abduction. The Nigerian authorities’ consistent failure to protect people is completely unacceptable and must end,” the rights group said.
It also called on those with command responsibilities for security in the areas where the abductions took place to be held to account for the glaring failures that have put the lives of hundreds of people in danger.