Insecurity will  discourage girl-child education, says Ezekwesili
 
 If there had been adequate security for rural schools, the 219 
schoolgirls kidnapped by Boko Haram last April will still be with their 
parents, Dr. Obiageli Ezekwesili, a senior economic adviser, Africa 
Economic Development Policy Initiative to Open Society Foundations 
(OSF), has said.
 The former minister of Education said the abduction
 was the height of violence against the girl-child education, urging the
 society to lend its voice to the campaign for the release of the girls.
 Ezekwesili spoke yesterday at an event marking the International Day 
for the Girl-Child, held at the United States Embassy in Lagos.
 She 
said the reason for women exclusion from the activities of a society was
 because of the valuable resources they could contribute to the 
development of the society, adding that any country that kept its girls 
out of school would lose its essence in all fronts.
 Speaking on the 
challenges facing the girl-child education in the country, Dr. 
Ezekwesili said the girl-child’s morale would be boosted if government 
could secure their schools from invasion by criminals, who wanted to 
keep them out of school by all means.
 She said members of Boko Haram
 sect would not have succeeded in abducting the Chibok girls if 
government had provided adequate security for schools in rural 
communities, where many girls are deprived of education.
 She said 
there was no debate whether girls wanted education or not, stressing 
that the onus was on the government to provide incentives that would 
make education attractive to every child.
 Said she: “As a country, 
we should not be a society that will extend untenable options to a 
girl-child on whether she wants education or she wants to be saved. If 
hundreds of schoolgirls in Chibok village could answer a clarion call to
 get education despite their deprived backgrounds, we should not pretend
 not to understand what the girl-child wants.
 “Sadly, in the course 
of acquiring education, these girls were abducted by people, who want to
 keep them out of the school, on April 15. Initially, we pretended as if
 nothing tragic had happened and the whole country moved on. If it is 
not that many women rose against the most heinous crime against the 
girls, we would have pretended as if nothing had happened.
 “Because 
the terrorists went away with murder in Buni Yadi, where they 
slaughtered students in their sleep, they had the effrontery to move 
their evil campaign to Chibok and abducted 276 schoolgirls, who were 
writing examinations. This is the most heinous crime against the 
girl-child.”
 While government said it was working round the clock to
 bring back the girls, Ezekwesili said it did not matter how the girls 
are rescued, but they must be brought back alive.
 She added: “On 
June 24, the spokesman for the Armed Forces told the world that the 
girls had been found. I was one of those, who clapped for our military 
officers for rescuing the girls from the criminals. Later, we were told 
the story was untrue and since then, we have been clamouring for the 
release of the girls.
 “We don’t care how the girls are rescued by 
the government. Either militarily or through dialogue, we cannot afford 
to be in a state of inaction. Empathy is the virtue that will make a man
 go into a public office and ensure that the society is run perfectly. 
If the Chibok girls had been the children of the elite and the political
 class, I wouldn’t have been spending my time to campaign about it in 
Abuja. But these are the children of the deprived people, who want to be
 educated despite their background. This is why we must all stand up to 
ensure the girls are brought back and alive.”
 The Executive 
Director, Women Consortium of Nigeria (WOCON), Mrs. Bisi 
Olateru-Olagbegi, said early marriage of the girl-child is a bad 
tradition that must be frowned at. She said economic incentives should 
be given to parents to enable them cater for their children in schools.
 Other speakers at the event included Senator Florence Ita-Giwa and a healthcare entrepreneur, Adebayo Alonge, among others.
10/10/2014
Insecurity will discourage girl-child education, says Ezekwesili
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