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Vigil To Mark 100 Days of Captivity For Chibok Girls

Chibok montage

Vigils are to be held around the world for Nigeria’s 200 kidnapped girls of Chibok on 23 July – exactly 100 days after their abduction from school.

After more than three months in captivity, the vigils will be staged at the same time in Africa, Asia, Latin America, Europe and the United States.

A new online petition by A World at School www.aworldatschool.org/100days will also call for the safe return of the girls and all messages of support will be passed to Chibok community leaders and families of the girls.

The petition will also be sent, by United Nations Special Envoy for Global Education Gordon Brown,  to Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan and UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon. The Chibok Girls’ families are also expected to sign the petition and offer their full support for the Safe Schools Initiative.

The Safe Schools Initiative – a fund set up to pilot 500 safe schools in northern Nigeria – is a programme that brings the Nigerian Government and Nigerian business leaders together with the international community to ensure that all children are secure when learning. The fund total currently stands at $23million.

Vigils will be held in several African countries organised by the Global March against Child Labour, in Pakistan by Baela Jamil of Idara-e-Taleem-o-Aagahi, in India by Kailash Sakharti’s Bachpan Bachao Andolan and across the world by A World at School’s Global Youth Ambassadors.

Mr Brown, who will start his  new term as Special Education Envoy this month, said: “We, of course, hope that the Chibok girls will be released before July 23, however, by marking the 100th day of the abduction of the girls, kidnapped by Boko Haram terrorists, and by pledging never to abandon them, we are reminding people that we are in the midst of a global civil rights struggle.

 

“Girls’ rights should be taken seriously and they should have the right to be at school free of intimidation and violence. We will mark the 100 days by pledging to rebuild their Chibok school and by calling for international support for safe schools across Nigeria.”

 

Girls of Chibok mothers in Nigeria

Vigils for the kidnapped Nigerian schoolgirls will be held around the world on July 23 – 100 days after they were taken by Boko Haram.

We want to stand with those who are suffering. We don’t want the perpetrators of crimes to think we have forgotten. And we want to make change happen.

By holding vigils, we hope to increase pressure on those who can help to free the 219 girls of Chibok still missing.

A new online petition by A World at School will also call for the safe return of the girls. All messages of support from that petition will be passed to Chibok community leaders and families of the girls.

The petition will also be sent, by United Nations Special Envoy for Global Education Gordon Brown, to Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan and UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon. The Chibok Girls’ families are also expected to sign the petition and offer their full support for the Safe Schools Initative.

OTHER 100-DAY VIGILS COVERAGE:  Worldwide vigils on July 23 andyour messages of support for the girls.

Vigils are a way to peacefully show support for a cause. They can take many forms – a silent moment of reflection, a pause for prayer, or the lighting of a candle to demonstrate the issue is in our thoughts.

Events will be held across the globe on July 23 – from Hackney Town Hall in London to the Nigerian capital Abuja –  as communities come together to stand in solidarity. They will be marking the 100 days in different ways.

Here we look at five famous vigils which show how people around the world have demonstrated support for issues they care about and made their voices heard.

Tiananmen Square vigil in Hong Kong

Tiananmen Square

Every year since 1990, people have gathered on June 4 in Victoria Park, Hong Kong, to honour those massacred at Tiananmen Square in Beijing, China, in 1989. This year, on the 25th anniversary, 180,000 people gathered with candles.

Mothers of Plaza de Mayo Argentina vigil

Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo

During the “Dirty War” in Argentina (1976 to 1983), the military government abducted and killed thousands. In 1977 a group of mothers met each Thursday in the Plaza de Mayo in Buenos Aires. They walked in non-violent demonstrations and chanted: “We want our children; we want them to tell us where they are.”  They walked each week until 1983 when the military were overthrown.

Trapped Chilean miners vigil

Chilean miners

When 33 miners were trapped underground in Copiapó, Chile, in October 2010 churches across the country held 24-hour prayer vigils for more than two months until the last miner was rescued. Chilean President Sebastian Pinera thanked the families of the miners “who maintained faith – this faith that ended up moving mountains”.

Flower power demonstration in Washington DC

Flower power and the Pentagon

In 1967 30,000 people marched from the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, DC, to the Pentagon where they held an all-night vigil against the Vietnam war. When a plan to airdrop 10,000 flowers on the Pentagon was foiled by undercover agents, some of these flowers were placed in the barrels of police rifles and the term “flower power” was coined.

Al Jazeera journalists

To protest against the jail sentences of three Al Jazeera journalists in Egypt, journalists across the world held a minute’s silence on June 24, 2014. Journalists stood with black tape across their mouths outside the BBC studios in London and in Al Jazeera offices in the Middle East, holding signs with the slogan “Journalism is not a crime”.

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