American R &
B singer and multiple Grammy Award winner, Alicia Keys, has charged all
concerned not to give up in pressing for the release of the 219 Chibok school
girls abducted by the Islamic extremist group, Boko Haram.
Keys said she had taken it upon herself to project the fate of
the girls lamenting as unbelievable the fact that the girls have stayed in the
captivity of the group for more than six months.
She spoke just as the Bring Back Our Girls campaign group in
Abuja held a candle light vigil to mark the 180th day of the abduction of the
girls from Government Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State.
“Putting the spotlight on these girls is very, very important to
me and I thought that it is my job to help shine the light on what is going on
and show people: this is still happening and we must not forget and it is going
on for six months,” she spoke in a television interview monitored on CNN.
“Six months and nobody is back and the girls are just there
because of the need of education and they are abducted? So that is why we must
say that we are not allowing this to dissipate, no, we are going to continue to
say we are not standing for this, it is not okay,” Keys, who has sold more than
35 million albums and 30 million singles and is ranked 10th by Billboard
Magazine among America’s most successful R&B singers in the last quarter
century, said.
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