Nigerians, and indeed the world, today yet again joined in solidarity to call for the rescue of the 219 Chibok school girls who were abducted from their dormitory on April 14, 2014.
From the Nigerian Senate, to international agencies and even the worlds youngest Nobel Prize laureate and female education activist, Malala Yousafzai, the wish is the same – that the girls regain freedon and are reunited with their families.
Encomium.ng compiles some of the goodwill messages in commemoration of the Chibok girls’ abduction two years ago.
“The #ChibokGirls are now a symbol of our apparent weakness to protect young lives” @UN Envoy Gordon Brown https://t.co/QwtEJiaQtx
— Gordon & Sarah Brown (@OfficeGSBrown) April 14, 2016
The Senate is saddened about the long absence of the #Chibok Girls abducted by the Boko Haram insurgents from Chibok community 2 years ago.
— Nigerian Senate (@NGRSenate) April 14, 2016
The #ChibokGirls take center stage on the floor of the House this morning…. #NeverToBeForgotten
— Rinsola Abiola (@Rinsola_Abiola_) April 14, 2016
Today, as we remember the abducted #ChibokGirls, we must make a vow as leaders to never let politics come before discharging our duties.
— Rt Hon Yakubu Dogara (@SpeakerDogara) April 14, 2016
2yrs after their kidnapping, awful video showing missing #Chibok girls must spur Nigerian govt to #BringBackOurGirls https://t.co/xgZ8Diu3SF
— Amnesty UK (@AmnestyUK) April 14, 2016
2 hours of not knowing where your child is sends you into panic mode.
2 days.
2 weeks.
2 months.
2 years.
Too long! pic.twitter.com/JliMeeayeE— ‘Gbénga Sèsan (@gbengasesan) April 14, 2016
Today marks 2 yrs since over 200 schoolgirls were abducted by Boko Haram in Chibok, #Nigeria #BringBackOurChildhood pic.twitter.com/qoFIiQKNEn
— UNICEF (@UNICEF) April 14, 2016
“My dream is… they will come home, finish their edu & choose their futures for themselves” https://t.co/6NiKsPwb9P pic.twitter.com/FCTJSXzwUR
— Malala Fund (@MalalaFund) April 14, 2016