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Abducted Nigeria schoolgirls 'brought back' by Boko Haram: parents

AFP  |  Lagos 

Islamists who kidnapped more than 100 schoolgirls in Dapchi, northeast Nigeria, just over a month ago have returned the students to the town, two parents said today.

A senior government source in and police in Yobe state also confirmed the girls' return although it was not immediately clear how many of the 110 students had been freed.

The kidnapping on February 19 brought back painful memories of a similar abduction in Chibok in April 2014, when more than 200 girls were taken.

Bashir Manzo, who heads a parents' support group in Dapchi, said: "The girls have been brought back. They were brought in nine vehicles and dropped outside the school at about 8:00 am.

"I have the list of the missing girls with me, so I am now heading to the school to take a roll call of the returned girls to determine if any of them is still missing.

"These girls were not accompanied by any security personnel. Their abductors brought them, dropped them outside the school and left, without talking to anyone.

"We will get to know more details from the girls about their predicament while in captivity."

Alhaji Deri, whose daughter was among those kidnapped, supported Manzo's account in a separate phone call, adding: "We are here in the school with the girls."


A senior government source in confirmed the release but said officials were still trying to verify how many girls had been freed.

Nigeria's said last week said the government had "chosen negotiation" to secure the return of the girls rather than use military force.

"We are trying to be careful. It is better to get our daughters back alive," he said.

has used kidnapping as a weapon of war during its nearly nine-year insurgency which has claimed at least 20,000 lives and made more than two million others homeless.

The Islamic State (IS) group affiliate has not claimed responsibility for the abduction but it is understood that a faction headed by Abu was behind it.

In August 2015, IS publicly backed Barnawi as of Boko Haram, or Islamic State Province, over Abubakar Shekau, whose supporters carried out the Chibok abduction.

Analysts have attributed a financial motive to the kidnapping given government ransom payments made to to secure the release of some of the captives from Chibok.

Questions are likely to be raised about the circumstances of the release, particularly if fighters were able to travel in to and out of unchallenged.

Yan St-Pierre, a with the in Berlin, said the girls' release was not without precedent.

Earlier this year, a number of hostages, including university lecturers, were freed.

But he said the latest release was "casual enough to raise a lot of questions, especially about the payment".

"If they did pay, the likely paid a premium to accelerate the release in order to avoid another Chibok," he added.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, March 21 2018. 15:26 IST
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