Leah Sharibu’s Mother Pleads With British Government To Help Rescue Daughter

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Rebecca Sharibu and Mervyn Thomas, founder of Christian Solidarity Worldwide at the two years anniversary of Dapchi girls abduction in London yesterday.

Mrs. Rebecca Sharibu, mother of Leah Sharibu, one of the abducted students of the Government Girls Technical College, Dapchi, Yobe State, yesterday pleaded with the British Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, to help rescue her daughter from the clutches of Boko Haram insurgents.

Leah was abducted from the college hostel alongside 109 other girls on February 19, 2018. Now aged 16, the girl is still held hostage by the terrorists because she refused to renounce her Christianity. She would be marking her third birthday with the insurgents in May if nothing is done to secure her release.

Mrs. Sharibu, who spoke at an event to mark the second anniversary of Dapchi girls’ abduction held in Westminster, United Kingdom, said she was “constantly in pain” over her daughter’s abduction.

Speaking in Hausa language and translated to English by the Head of the Leah Sharibu Foundation, Dr. Gloria Puldu, Leah’s mother pleaded with the British Government to ask President Muhammadu Buhari to intervene in the girl’s case.

She said: “I have come to plead with the UK, the United States and all the nations to please hear me and help me out. I am pleading with your government, please do whatever you can to get my daughter released.

“I want to plead directly to Prime Minister Boris Johnson that he should please help me to ask President Buhari to release my daughter. My daughter, my only daughter, is already two years in captivity, and President Buhari promised me that she would be released but she has not been released. I need Leah back home and I need him to set Leah free, just like the other girls were set free.

“The students who were taken along with Leah have been brought back to their parents but we have been going through pain for two years, pains that cannot be described,” she said.

Boko Haram prompted an international outcry after the 2014 attack on a boarding school in Chibok, where the terrorists kidnapped 276 girls, some of whom are still being held by the group.

Mrs. Sharibu said she had only heard “rumours” about her daughter’s condition in captivity, but believed she was still alive as a health worker who was released reported hearing Leah was alive from another captive.

“On a daily basis we hear Leah this, Leah that. We are in great pains. At times, when the stories come out, we feel so pained, we feel so terrible. We are constantly in pain, all we desire is to have Leah back with us.”

Baroness Caroline Cox also spoke at the event to help launch the International Organisation for Peace and Social Justice’s Silent Slaughter campaign to raise awareness of violence in Nigeria.

Warning about the risk of a genocide, she said: “The British Government ought to recognise the seriousness of what’s happening.”

The protest march was organised by the Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW).

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