There’s a popular tale about an emperor who insists he is wearing lavish robes — and his followers pretend he is — until a child exclaims, “the emperor has no clothes!”
That child’s unapologetic sense of truth is the kind needed for Nigeria, a country that is regularly called a “giant,” yet lost 276 Chibok schoolgirls to Boko Haram terrorists on Apr. 14, 2014, exactly one year ago today.
The brutal truth that Nigerian leaders need to hear is that Nigeria is no giant: not with the stain of its abducted schoolgirls on its conscience, and not with a recent need for less “giant” countries like Niger and Chad to help it fight its Islamist insurgency.
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And, while the people of Nigeria have voted out the president who failed to recover the schoolgirls, Goodluck Jonathan, they must still hold him to this truth.
They must demand, until his very last day in office on May 29, that he recover the captured girls after years of ignoring Boko Haram, leaving the group to destroy the northeastern region of the country and displace one million citizens.
Of course, Jonathan is likely happy to transfer the biggest headache of his presidency, Boko Haram, to President-elect Muhammadu Buhari, so chances are slim that he will suddenly develop the leadership and strategic instinct needed to find the girls. However, we must not let a day pass that the girls are forgotten because of a lame duck.
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If the people of Nigeria trivialize the extent to which a corrupt team like Jonathan’s can lose innocent schoolgirls and then campaign nonchalantly for his re-election afterward, they would be dishonoring the girls.
If they pretend that the loss of 276 girls is not symptomatic of a deeper political fracture within Nigeria, they would be dishonoring the girls.
Our praise for Jonathan’s civil transfer of power to Buhari should be cautious, mindful that terrorists still roam the north and have effectively captured some of its regions. Now would also be a good time for Nigerians to stop celebrating such commonplace democratic practices as “smooth transfer of power” and start expecting them as the norm.
In short, to honor our schoolgirls, it’s time to stop hailing mediocrity and start demanding more.
We do not know whether the retired general Buhari, who once ruled Nigeria briefly under strict dictatorship, will realize the goal of the global hashtag #BringBackOurGirls, or defeat Boko Haram as he promised while campaigning. (He said Tuesday, in an effort to be transparent, that he “cannot promise” to find the girls.)
RELATED: One year after #BringBackOurGirls, Boko Haram still holds hundreds








