“I’m tired of the same stories,” the minister said after being cornered by the reporter for an unplanned interview at the World Economic Forum meeting in Abuja.
Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala explained she was not competent to speak on the issue since she was not the government spokesperson.
But
it seemed the minister soon realized her mistake and promptly agreed to
make some explanations on the government’s effort at dealing with the
abductions.
The reporter had asked about Amnesty International’s
report that the Nigerian military received advance warning and yet
failed to stop Boko Haram from taking the girls April 14 from their
dormitories.
“I cannot answer those questions. I am the minister of finance.
I can
only tell you about the full commitment of the government and the
pledge of the international community as demonstrated by this
conference,” she responded.
Asked what the government was doing about rescuing the girls, the minister said “everything” was being done.
“The government has sent out additional troops, the government is doing aerial surveillance, the government is working with companies that have satellite, the government is working with the U; is waiting for the promised help from all the sources that have pledged,” she said. Buy Cheap Android Phones on Konga.com | Lowest Price in Nigeria
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“The government, with the private sector, has supported the
initiatives lunched here for Safe Schools for our children. So, the
government is doing the maximum it can, it has opened the crises centre
so that they can provide up-to-date information. Everything is being
done, like I said terror will win when we divide.”
The
minister said the objective of Boko Haram, the extremist group
responsible for the abductions, was to stop the world community from
coming to Nigeria.
“That’s why they did that; and the world
community said, ‘No, we will come to support our girls.’ And they’ve
come in solidarity. This is the largest ever world economic forum
conference ever after Davos,” she added.
The minister then
broke off from the interview as the ABC reporter pressed for specific
details of the government’s engagement with Boko Haram, advising him
instead to speak to Nigerian military authorities.
That explanation appeared of little help as hours later, ABC News published its story headlined, “Nigeria official says she’s tired of talking about the kidnapped girls”.
Apparently
to pre-empt a backlash, the minister released a transcript of the
interview on her Facebook page late Saturday; but the transcript
excluded the initial exchange with the journalist.
The Nigerian
government has come under intense scrutiny over its handling of the
kidnapping after it took more than two weeks for President Goodluck
Jonathan to respond to the raid.
A day after the incident, Mr.
Jonathan was photographed singing and dancing at a political rally in
Kano State, despite at least 75 people having been killed in a car bomb
in Abuja on the same day the kidnapping occured.
Mr. Jonathan has said the abduction of the school girls is the “beginning of end” of Boko Haram.
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