Thursday 22 May 2014

Nigerian teachers protest over kidnapped schoolgirls

BBC

In this photo taken from video by Nigeria's Boko Haram group released on Monday 12 May 2014 shows the alleged missing girls abducted from the north-eastern town of ChibokThe schoolgirls are believed to be held in a remote part of Borno state
Teachers across Nigeria are holding a day of protests in support of more than 200 schoolgirls seized by the Islamist group Boko Haram last month.
Teaching unions said they would also march in memory of the 173 teachers killed by militants.
It follows two days of bloody attacks in the country, in which nearly 150 people have been killed.
Nigeria's government is under pressure to do more to tackle Boko Haram and bring about the girls' release.
US President Barack Obama on Wednesday said he had deployed 80 military personnel to neighbouring Chad to help in the search.
The girls were taken from their school in Chibok, in north-eastern Borno state, on 14 April. They are thought to be held in a remote forested area of the state, close to the border with Chad and Cameroon.
'Very scared'
The Nigerian Union of Teachers said all schools across the country would be closed so teachers can participate in a series of "Bring Back Our Girls" rallies.
President of the union Michael Olukoya said they would not stop campaigning "until our girls are brought back safe and alive and the perpetrators of the heinous crime are brought to book", Nigeria's Premium Times quotes him as saying.
Another union leader, Segun Raheem, said that teachers too were also a target - and the authorities were not doing enough to protect them.
"The majority of them are scared. They don't even sleep at home. And when they go to school, it is with shock," he told the BBC's Newsday programme.
Gabriel Gatehouse spoke to a Nigerian soldier who said the army was outnumbered and outgunned
"We feel that enough security has not been put in place... and we call on the government... not to play politics with the lives of our children and the teachers."
Nigeria is reeling from several days of violence.
Boko Haram is accused of killing 27 people in attacks on two villages, Shawa and Alagarno, not far from where the schoolgirls were taken.
Witnesses said they torched homes and shot at residents before leaving with stolen food and vehicles.
A double bombing in the central city of Jos on Tuesday, in which 118 people died, is also thought to have been the work of Boko Haram.
BBC graph
BBC graph
Rule
Nigeria under attack
  • 20 May: Twin bomb attacks killed at least 118 people in the central city of Jos
  • 18 May: Suicide blast on a busy street in northern city of Kano kills four, including a 12-year-old girl
  • 5 May: Boko Haram militants slaughter more than 300 residents in the town of Gamboru Ngala
  • 2 May: Car bomb claims at least 19 lives in the Nigerian capital, Abuja
  • 14 April: Twin bomb attack claimed by Boko Haram kills more than 70 at an Abuja bus station; the same day, the group abducts more than 200 schoolgirls from the remote northern town of Chibok
  • 17 March: At least 20 people die in a suicide car bomb at a bus stop in Kano

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