Chibok School Girl Nigeria marks three years of mass schoolgirl kidnap
Nigeria held rallies in major cities Thursday to mark three years
since the mass abduction of 276 schoolgirls by Boko Haram extremists.
Nigeria held rallies in major cities Thursday to mark three years since the mass abduction of 276 schoolgirls by Boko Haram extremists.
Spearheading
the rallies was the Bring Back Our Girls movement, which has been
urging the government of President Muhammadu Buhari to ramp up efforts
to free the 195 girls still believed held by the radical Islamic group.
One
rally was being held in the capital Abuja, where Nigeria's second most
influential traditional Muslim leader, the Emir of Kano, was to make an
address and lead prayers.
Parents of the
missing were congregating at the school where their daughters aged 12 to
17 were kidnapped in the northeastern village of Chibok on April 14,
2014.
Participants were set to plant trees as a symbolic gesture in memory of the missing girls.
Another rally was due in the country's commercial centre Lagos.
Fifty-seven
girls escaped in the immediate aftermath of the kidnapping while three
others were found or rescued by the military. Some had babies in
captivity.
Last October, 21 were freed
after negotiations between Boko Haram and the Nigerian government
brokered by the ICRC and the Swiss government.
The
Chibok schoolgirls have become a symbol of the Boko Haram insurgency
that began in 2009 and has left at least 20,000 people dead.
Despite
a military fight-back, villages near Chibok, which is 125 kilometres
(80 miles) by road from the Borno state capital, Maiduguri, have seen a
wave of suspected Boko Haram attacks in recent months.
A
presidential spokesman said Wednesday negotiations were ongoing with
"foreign entities" for the release of those still held by the
fundamentalist group active in Nigeria's northeast and which has pledged
allegiance to Islamic State.
Having
started as an extremist sect Boko Haram has mushroomed in recent years
into an ultra-violent jihadist movement which uses mass kidnapping as a
recruitment tool.
In December, Buhari
triumphantly announced the "final crushing" of the group, which he
described as being "on the run" after an army offensive flushed them out
of their stronghold in the huge Sambisa forest.
Boko
Haram leader Abubakar Shekau denied the claim and said that some of the
abducted girls were killed in Nigerian airstrikes against his group.
Support from abroad came in the shape of a British government statement Friday.
"We
are working side by side with Nigeria in the fight against Boko Haram
and call for the release of all those who have been taken," a foreign
ministry statement read.
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