Four Chibok girls escape
•Community ‘not aware’
Four of the more than 200 schoolgirls kidnapped by the militant
Islamist sect Boko Haram have escaped, raising hopes for the young ones
still held captive, according to a report.
The our source could not
independently confirm the report from the military last night. The story
was published byNew York Post online.
The Chibok community also said it was not aware of the escape by the girls.
The free girls, all between ages 16 and 18, escaped with the help of a
teenage boy prisoner, who managed to get them out of the camp, according
to Stephen Davis, a British-Australian negotiator who had tried to
bargain with the extremist Islamic group for the schoolgirls’ freedom.
The girls, guided by the setting sun, walked west for three weeks,
finally arriving in a Nigerian village, starving and traumatised.
“They were amazing — to first escape and then walk for weeks,” Davis
toldThe Timesof London. “They are the only ones that have escaped from a
Boko Haram camp.”
Davis said the girls had been told that if they fled Boko Haram, their families would be killed.
Director of Publicity Kibaku Area Development Association Dr. Manasseh
Allen, of the Chibok Community in Abuja, said last night, after making
calls, that he could not confirm the escape of the girls.
Six months
have passed since more than 200 girls were snatched from their
boarding-school dormitory in Borno State by Boko Haram operatives.
Their abduction sparked global outrage and a huge campaign calling for their rescue, partly propelled by the hashtag #BringBackOurGirls.
United States First Lady Michelle Obama issued a tweet holding a sign emblazoned with the hashtag.
Davis said several attempts to negotiate their release have fallen through.
Advocates have expressed frustration that the world has moved on.
“Even before Ebola and ISIS’s intensified activities, most of the world
that stood with #BringBackOurGirls had moved on,” Ibrahim Abdullahi,
the lawyer who started the #BringBackOurGirls campaign, said.
“But
we here in Nigeria and a few others outside haven’t moved on. We have
been persistent. We have been tweeting about it every day. We’re doing a
daily one-hour sit out in Abuja and weekly in Lagos.”
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