One year since the Christian teenager Leah Sharibu was abducted from her boarding school in north-eastern Nigeria by an Islamist group, a coalition of groups have called on presidential candidates to tell Nigerians how they plan to secure her release.
“We are urging the political parties and their candidates that now that the campaigns have reopened, they should not begin any campaigns without addressing us on the future of Leah,” Mr Emmanuel Ogeb, chairman of the Coalition for Leah, told journalists in Abuja on 19 February.
Nigeria is scheduled to go to the polls 23 February to elect a new president. Originally scheduled for 16 February, voting was postponed for one week.
“Leah has been gone for too long, so tell us how you are going to bring her and the remaining Chibok girls back. The fact that they [the government] were able to bring back the 100 girls that were adopted alongside Leah show that they have the capacity to release Leah,” said Ogeb, as quoted by the Daily Times.
“It is tragic and a political miscalculation for the presidential candidates to dodge talking publicly about their respective commitment to free Leah and others in captivity,” Rev. Gideon Para-Mallam of the Citizens Monitoring Group, told the Daily Post.
‘Keep that promise’
Leah, 15, was taken when the Boko Haram abducted 110 girls during a raid on a school in Dapchi, in Yobe state, on 19 February 2018.
Following a deal between the government and the militants, Boko Haram released 104 girls, with the last five thought to have died in captivity. The group has kept Leah, a Christian, because she refused to renounce her faith.
On the first anniversary of her abduction, family and community members met at her parents’ home in Dapchi.
“We have gathered at Leah’s House in Dapchi today to show our solidarity to the mother and parents of Leah. As it is today, we don’t know the kind of condition that Leah is inside. Whether she is alive, healthy or sick, we don’t know,” Secretary of Association of Parents of Abducted Dapchi Girls, Kachalla Mohammed told newspaper The Nation.
The government should pay Boko Haram whatever they want in order to set Leah free, said the Association’s Chairman, Bashir Manzo.
“The president should expedite actions on the release of Leah. Let the president pay whatever Boko Haram is requesting so that this little girl will be set free,” he said. ‘’They would have done anything within their powers to release this girl if it’s their own child.”
In a government statement in March Nigeria’s president, Muhammadu Buhari, said he was “committed to the freedom of the only Dapchi schoolgirl still in captivity,” according to the BBC. “The lone Dapchi girl will not be abandoned.”
Her mother Rebecca called again on the president to keep his promises. “The government should keep the promises made by the President and the ministers who visited us in Dapchi in October. They should rescue my daughter,” she told journalists in Abuja last week, speaking through an interpreter.
“Since [October], I have not heard anything from the Federal Government again,” her father Nathan said 19 February in an interview on Nigeria’s TVC, as reported by The Nation.
“The other bodies that have been deeply concerned about the development are only the churches and Muslims that are trying their possible best. The government has been silent on this issue. I am only pleading with government, as I always do, that they should do their possible best to see that my daughter returns safely,” he said.
In October Boko Haram threaten to kill Leah and three other hostages after it killed a midwife who had been serving with the International Committee of the Red Cross.
‘Help me out of my predicament’
When her friends were released Leah sent a message to her mother, saying: “My mother you should not be disturbed. I know it is not easy missing me, but I want to assure you that I am fine where I am … I am confident that one day I shall see your face again. If not here, then there at the bosom of our Lord Jesus Christ.”
In August in a 35-second audio recording surfaced, obtained by Ahmad Salkida for Nigerian newspaper The Cable, in which Leah asks for help for her family and herself.
“I also plead to the members of the public to help my mother, my father, my younger brother and relatives. Kindly help me out of my predicament. I am begging you to treat me with compassion. I am calling on the government, particularly the president, to pity me and get me out of this serious situation. Thank you,” she said.
The religious freedom watchdog Open Doors is running an e-writing campaign to transmit letters of encouragement to Leah’s parents, while the advocacy group Christian Solidary Worldwide marked her one year in captivity with a protest in front of the Nigerian High Commission in London, calling for the release of Leah and of 112 girls who remain missing after they were kidnapped from their school in Chibok, Nigeria, in 2014.