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Abducted Girls: Why I Rejected Jonathan's Offer-Falana

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Human rights lawyer and activist, Mr. Femi Falana, who rejected an appointment by President Goodluck Jonathan to be part of a 26-man presidential panel to secure the release of the abducted 223 pupils of Government Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State, has said his decision was based on conflicting interest on the issue.

In a rejection letter titled: Re: Presidential Committee on Abducted Girls, Falana said he had been appointed by other stakeholders in the case including the parents of the children to help them with the legal aspect of the case and that he had accepted their appointment. As a result, accepting the president's offer would affect him negatively.

He also tasked the President to concentrate more on forcing the Joint Task Force (JTF) to intensify military campaign for the release of the girls.

Read an excerpt from the letter below…

 l thank the Federal Government for appointing me as a member of the Presidential Committee to make recommendations for the release of the 223 students of the Government College, Chibok, Borno State who are still held incommunicado in the illegal custody of a gang of heartless criminals,” the letter read.

Apart from my involvement in the ongoing nationwide demonstrations in which protesters are demanding for the immediate release of the abducted girls from the custody of the dreaded Boko Haram sect, a Committee of Concerned Nigerians working with the parents of the girls has engaged my professional services to seek legal redress with a view to compelling the Federal Government to discharge its duty to the victims of the crime against humanity.

Furthermore, I have accepted the request to collaborate with an international human rights organisation which is currently mobilising diplomatic and political support for the release of the abducted girls from the captivity of the nihilist forces.

In the light of the foregoing, I regret my inability to accept the appointment to serve on the Committee to determine the number of the missing girls.

However, I urge the President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces to direct the Joint Task Force to intensify the military campaign to secure the release of the girls. After all, the military authorities did announce last week that the girls would regain their liberty in a matter of days.