This morning’s key headlines from GenerationalDynamics.com

Boko Haram abduction of schoolgirls becomes international issue

The United States is leading an international effort, along with Britain, France, and China, to help Nigeria find the 276 or so missing schoolgirls that were abducted by the terror group Boko Haram on April 16. It’s believed that the U.S. will provide some military help using drones, launched from a new drone base in Niger. However, it’s believed that the search for the girls will be hampered by the fact that the girls have probably been split up into smaller groups; that they’ve probably been moved into neighboring countries of Niger, Cameroon, and Chad; and that some of them may already have been sold as slave girls.

Boko Haram has followed the abduction with a series of additional terror attacks, including a bombing in the capital city of Abuja, the abduction of eight additional girls last Sunday, and the murder of hundreds of people in a village on Monday. It used to be that Boko Haram bombed government installations and Christian churches, but now it seems that Boko Haram has almost “freaked out” with mass attacks on civilians that are so gruesome and horrific that even al-Qaeda avoids them because of the negative publicity.

For a couple of weeks after the abduction occurred, it seemed that nobody particularly cared – not the government of Nigeria, and not the international community. But this week feminists have come out with a #BringBackOurGirls Twitter campaign. Whether the cries of feminist outrage will encourage Boko Haram to change its way or, to the contrary, will encourage Boko Haram to abduct even more schoolgirls remains to be seen. CS Monitor and CNN and Tribune (Nigeria)

Ukraine’s pro-Russian activists to go ahead with secession referendum

Pro-Russian activists in eastern Ukraine have defiantly announced thatthey have three million ballots already printed and that they’re goingahead with Sunday’s referendum on separation from Ukraine, despiteWednesday’s surprising call from Russia’s president Vladimir Putin topostpone it.

I listened to several different analysts and commentators speculate onthe reasons Putin made his flip-flop and called for postponementof the referendum. Here are some of the speculations:

Interestingly enough, I didn’t hear a single commentator say thatPutin called off the referendum because “it’s the right thing to do.”

On Thursday, the Pentagon repeated that there have been no changesto the Russian forces on the border, despite Putin’s obviouslydishonest claim that Russian forces had been pulled back. AP and Pew Research and CS Monitor

Permanent web link to this article
Receive daily World View columns by e-mail