Boko Haram atrocities make us powerless -Eto’o Fils
BY ABONG CLEXTUS
The former Barcelona and Chelsea star has set up the Yellow
Whistleblower FC foundation to raise funds and awareness to help people fleeing
Nigeria and Cameroon amid a rising tide of attacks from Boko Haram militants.
Former Cameroon captain Eto’o, who retired from international football
last year, told CNN it was time the world stepped up its response to an ongoing
catastrophe.
The 34-year-old urged leaders and the media to react as they did to the
terror attack on the Charlie Hebdo magazine offices in Paris in January.
“It is important for us to talk about it — if we don’t do it, who
will?” said the four-time African player of the year.
“We all tried to offer our support (after Charlie Hebdo). We saw
African head of states coming to Paris to offer their support to France.
“Why, when it comes to Africa — when it comes to our continent — don’t
we do anything? Maybe because the media are not doing what they should do.
“When it comes to Charlie Hebdo, we talk about it. The media were
right: It was important to talk about that. However when it comes to Boko
Haram, we need to wait for the most horrific things to happen for the media to
say a word.
“After that, everybody stops talking about it. It is like nothing ever
happened.
“I think journalists should have denounced this situation. We saw what
happened in France. We were very sad about this. We were asking ourselves, ‘How
can this happen? How can they succeed? How can these people take away lives of
happy people who had families and friends?'”
Most formidable weapon
The soccer star’s foundation has already raised more than $75,000 to
help displaced victims of Boko Haram terrorism, and Eto’o said he believed
Africans in a position to do so must “raise their voices to denounce these
horrors and raise awareness.”
“I was affected, like many of my African brothers, by Boko Haram. We
haven’t been affected by such horrors in a very long time,” he said. “We are
seeing these atrocities and we seem powerless.
“We need to cope with this situation. We need to denounce it and find
solutions at our level while our armed forces do their own job on the ground.”
Eto’o said one of the most effective ways to defeat Boko Haram and its
ideology would be through education, which he called “the most formidable
weapon.”
“We need to create schools and give the possibility to these children
to learn and understand,” explained Eto’o, whose illustrious career has taken
him to Italy, Spain, Russia, England and Turkey, winning three European
Champions League titles. He was reportedly one of the world’s highest-paid
players at Anzhi Makhachkala.
“Some of these children affected by the situation are young and are
easily manipulable, and they are manipulated. These children are used and join
this terrorist organization.”
Last month, an attack by Boko Haram militants on a market and an
infirmary in northern Cameroon killed around 30 people and injured 145,
according to a military official.
The attack provided another demonstration of the Islamist group’s reach
in Africa.
Col. Didier Badjeck, a spokesman for Cameroon’s military, said the
attackers “came in from across the hills in Nigeria” to launch the attacks in
the town of Kerawa.
Eto’o, who now plays for Turkish club Antalyaspor, said: “We wanted to
show the right way to our young brothers, but the ignorance that we have in
Africa leads to our own brothers shooting at us.
“When you are African, and you are sometimes better (at something) than
Europeans or Americans, you’re not considered African.
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