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October 14, 2016

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Boko Haram frees 21 kidnapped girls

TWENTY-ONE of Nigeria’s Chibok schoolgirls kidnapped by Boko Haram more than two years ago have been freed in a swap for detained leaders of the Islamic extremist group, the government and military said yesterday.

Some 197 girls remain captive, though it is not known how many of them may have died.

The freed girls, the first to be released as a result of government action, are in the custody of the Department of State Services, Nigeria’s secret intelligence agency, according to presidential spokesman Garba Shehu.

Their release was negotiated between the government and Boko Haram in talks brokered by the International Committee of the Red Cross and the Swiss government, he said.

Negotiations will continue for the release of the other students, he added.

A military officer familiar with the talks said that four detained Boko Haram leaders were released on Wednesday night in Banki, a town on the northeast border with Cameroon.

The girls were flown by helicopter to Maiduguri, the northeastern capital of Borno state and birthplace of Boko Haram, he said.

“We are extremely delighted and grateful,” the Bring Back Our Girls movement said on Facebook.

The group, which has campaigned within Nigeria and internationally for the release of the students, said it was waiting to find out the names of the released girls.

“We thank the federal government and, like Oliver Twist, we ask for more,” said Professor Hauwa Biu, an activist in Maiduguri.

Negotiations last year failed when Boko Haram demanded a ransom of US$5.2 billion for the girls’ freedom, according to a recently published authorized biography of President Muhammadu Buhari by American historian John Paden.

It was not clear if any money changed hands in this swap.

The abduction of the 276 schoolgirls in April 2014 and the government’s failure to quickly free them has caused international outrage and brought Boko Haram, Nigeria’s home-grown Islamic extremist group, to the world’s attention.

Dozens of the girls escaped on their own, but most remain missing.

In May, one of the girls, Amina Ali Nkeki, made her escape and shortly after told her family that some of the kidnapped girls had died from their illnesses and that others, like her, had been married to fighters, were pregnant or already had babies.

Since her escape, Nkeki has been in the custody of the secret service where she is receiving medical care and trauma counseling, according to the government.

Buhari’s government has been criticized for keeping her isolated.

The Bring Back Our Girls group and Human Rights Watch have asked whether Nkeki now is a detainee of the government.




 

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