Yahoo – AFP,
25 May 2014
Nouakchott (AFP) - The abduction of more than 200 schoolgirls in Nigeria last month was "contrary to the teachings of Islam", the head of the African Union (AU) said at an event to mark Africa Day on Sunday.
![]() |
| People march holding placards as hundreds of Soweto residents gather on May 22, 2014 (AFP Photo/Mujahid Safodien) |
Nouakchott (AFP) - The abduction of more than 200 schoolgirls in Nigeria last month was "contrary to the teachings of Islam", the head of the African Union (AU) said at an event to mark Africa Day on Sunday.
"We
strongly condemn the abduction of the young, innocent schoolgirls in Nigeria.
We urge their immediate unconditional release," said Mohamed Ould Abdel
Aziz, who is also president of Mauritania, in a message to Africans sent out
over the weekend.
"These
actions are contrary to the teachings of Islam, a religion of tolerance and
peace," he said, marking the 51st anniversary of the creation of the
Organisation of African Unity, the predecessor to the AU.
The
Islamist group Boko Haram has claimed responsibility for the mass abduction on
April 14 in Chibok, in northeast Nigeria. It has carried out a brutal
insurgency in the region since 2009, that has claimed around 2,000 lives this
year alone.
"The
situation in Mali, in Nigeria, in the Central African Republic, in Somalia, in
South Sudan and in Libya challenges us and deserves all of our attention,"
said Abdel Aziz.
The
president also used the speech to call for reform of the United Nations.
"Africa
relies on its partners to help meet the challenges of underdevelopment. Reform
of the UN system, in the sense of enhancing the role and weight of Africa, is
necessary."
He said
"food self-sufficiency, the development of agribusiness and the fight
against poverty and malnutrition" were key priorities for the AU.
On the
economic front, he celebrated the "strong growth in the continent",
which is "immensely rich and young, with enormous potential", and
called for the creation of "a strong continental free trade zone of more
than a billion consumers".

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.