Share

Rescued Chibok girl will meet with Nigerian president

The schoolgirl is the first to be rescued since members of the Islamist militant group stormed the Government Secondary School in the town of Chibok in April 2014 and abducted almost 300 girls.

Advertisement

One of the schoolgirls abducted by Boko Haram militants in an infamous mass kidnapping in northeast Nigeria has been rescued, an army spokesman and a vigilante leader said on Wednesday. Dozens escaped in the first hours, but 219 remained missing. Parents insisted that more than 200 girls were still missing.

She was found on Tuesday and reunited with her family.

Amina Ali Nkeki was a kid when she was abducted, but after two years, she is now accompanied by a baby and a man who claims to be her husband. She had a baby with her and was severely traumatized, according to her uncle. He said her mother had confirmed her identity.

She was with a suspected Boko Haram fighter who is now in the Nigerian military’s custody.

“We have some information that about six of the abducted Chibok School girls lost their lives”.

The Nigerian Army had earlier announced the rescue of one of the abducted Chibok school girls and promised to give more information.

“It was in the dead of night, from their dorms”.

“From now on, I shall call out any media that writes or says “her Boko Haram husband” for that predator that violated #AminaAli”.

However, a relative of Nkek said the young woman was found pregnant. It really touched the world consciousness.

Share your views about the young woman who has returned home from Boko Haram’s captivity with us and fellow readers in the below given comment box.

“Many of the parents are still thinking about the where about of their children because they want to see the rest of the children back”.

Benin, Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria vow to fight Boko Haram together, in what Cameroon President Paul Biya terms a “declaration of war”.

United Nations rights experts said in January there was an “urgent and pressing need for effective measures to address stigma, ostracism and rejection of women and children” due to their abduction. Some captives are used in bombing attacks.

Advertisement

Some managed to escape but 219 were still missing. They quoted her saying that her schoolmates were still in the Sambisa forest, Boko Haram’s biggest stronghold in the remote north.

521141268-members-of-bring-back-our-girls-movement-carry-1