Former Minister of
Education, Obiageli Ezekwesili, was Monday morning arrested by security agents
at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, as she tried to
travel to London for a scheduled engagement.
She was however
released after the government came under intense pressure as news of her arrest
flooded the social media and travelled around the country, with many Nigerians
lambasting the administration for increasingly clamping down on critics and
members of the opposition.
Mrs. Ezekwesili
had tweeted at 7:37 a.m. Monday that she was heading to London to appear on the
BBC Hardtalk programme but was prevented from boarding her flight by security
operatives.
Is this a
democracy? I am being detained by the SSS at Nnamdi Azikiwe International
Airport . The SSS has refused to give my passport to me,” she posted. “On my
way to London this morning for my @BBCHARDtalk appearance billed for tomorrow and the SSS
has detained me by withholding my passport.”
These tweets soon
went viral within minutes with several Nigerians on social media lampooning the
government and calling for the immediate release of the former minister.
At 8:03 am, Mrs.
Ezekwesili tweeted that the operatives had released her passport.
“SSS has released
it. Just barely made the BA flight. Last to board @ 7.55 for an 8.00 am flight
that is now taxiing. Is this democracy?” she wrote. “No one can seize my
democratic rights. I refused to let the SSS get away with trampling on my
constitutional right.”
The former
minister is one of the leaders of the #BringBackOurGirls campaign group, which
has been consistently pressurising the Nigerian government to act more
decisively in rescuing the over 250 schoolgirls abducted from their dormitory
by the extremist Boko Haram sect over three months ago.
A former World
Bank executive, Mrs. Ezekwesili is a renowned anti-corruption campaigner and
she has in the past year become one of the most vociferous critics of the
Goodluck Jonathan administration.
She has accused
the administration of widespread corruption and has repeatedly demanded
accountability on the use of the nation’s oil revenues.
The
#BringBackOurGirls campaign she leads has become a thorn in the flesh of the
Jonathan administration with the government making unsubstantiated allegations
to discredit the campaigners.
The administration
recently hired an American Public Relations firm to help it counter the
narratives being pushed by the activists regarding the government’s effort to
rescue the missing girls.
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