by Ikemesit Effiong
“When the first shell hit land, they ran away but another shell hit them all,” said Abu Hassera, himself sporting a blood stained shirt. “It looked as if the shells were chasing them.”
It is always a monumental tragedy when violence is visited on the innocent among us. When I first read the report, I couldn’t help but think about one thing – our missing girls.
The case of the missing Chibok schoolgirls is an even greater tragedy when you consider the possibility that they may be alive. Death is both a pain and a relief in itself – the suffering ends with the snuffing out of a life, the calamity being over. Experiencing pain while being alive is a different proposition altogether. And our girls have endured a harrowing experience for 97 days now.
We cannot continue to remain in denial about their plight of our girls, act as if it never happened or worse, check it off on a list of recurring Nigerian debacles and move on. We must demand, and continue to demand action – we need an explanation as to how this could happen in the first place, allocate accountability for our longest serial tragedies where it belongs and make every effort to have them reunited with our families. Silence is not an option.
This is what serious nations do. For the memory of Palestinian boys, and our girls, do not remain silent.
Op-ed pieces and contributions are the opinions of the writers only and do not represent the opinions of Y!/YNaija.
It is a nice piece, keep it up sir. The fact that we view other people’s problem as it seems to be and not collective is the basic of this candition we are into. Nigeria is sinking. @idrees_talle