Graca Machel has broken the customary
mourning period for her late husband to
support the search for the missing Chibok
Girls.
Graca Mandela called on the Nigerian FG and
the international community to be more
proactive in finding the female students
kidnapped by Boko Haram terrorists last
month.
“The Nigerian government has a responsibility
to protect its citizens, and keep them safe,”
she said, amid allegations that the authorities
ignored a warning of the April 14 attack by
the Islamist group.
“If the world can mobilise all the means
possible to search for a plane carrying 239
passengers, certainly it can also mobilise the
means to find our girls. They deserve nothing
less.”
Machel, a noted activist in her own right, said
she felt compelled to break the traditional
Xhosa mourning period, which for her was
reduced from one year to six months.
Mandela died in December at his home in
Johannesburg, aged 95.
“I decided to break the restrictions of my
mourning because silence is not an option. I
know however, that Madiba will understand
and approve,” she said.
In an open letter, Machel said the girls’ “plight
has touched millions of hearts in Africa and
beyond.”
Addressing the parents of the girls, she said
“I am a parent and so I stand amongst you
holding your hands, in pain and anguish; in
solidarity.”
Machel barely left her husband’s bedside in
the final six months of his life.
Since his death, the Mozambican human rights
campaigner has rarely been seen in public.
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