Truro News

Students too scared to return to Nigeria school after attack

- BY SAM OLUKOYA

Frightened students are staying away from the school in northern Nigeria where Boko Haram extremists seized 110 girls in a raid a week ago, while pressure grows on the government to act.

The Government Girls Science and Technical College in Dapchi in Yobe state had been closed following the attack that reminded many of Boko Haram’s kidnapping of 276 girls from a boarding school in Chibok in 2014.

Teachers resumed classes on Monday, a day after Nigeria’s government for the first time acknowledg­ed the number of girls missing, but students were absent.

“My children did not go back to the school because they are too frightened to go there. We parents are equally frightened to see our daughters go there,” said Mohammed Mele, who has two

children in the school.

Another parent, Mohammed Ibrahim, told The Associated Press the family will look for a safer school. “Many other parents

are not likely to send their children back,” he said.

Students and parents are still going through trauma and the school will reopen when “frayed nerves cool down,” Yobe state education commission­er Mohammed Lamin said.

The fate of the 110 girls is not known, but witnesses have said the Islamic extremists specifical­ly asked where the girls’ school was located. Some eyewitness­es reported seeing young women taken away at gunpoint. Informatio­n Minister Lai Mohammed said 906 students were in the school at the time of the attack.

Anger has been growing in Nigeria as the government struggles to respond to the attack, with authoritie­s giving conflictin­g reports early on.

The Bring Back Our Girls movement that brought the Chibok mass abduction to world attention has embraced the cause of the Dapchi families, though with some astonishme­nt that the tragedy has happened again. As the fourth anniversar­y of the Chibok kidnapping­s approaches, the movement says 112 of those schoolgirl­s are yet to be found.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Rebecca Bitrus, a Nigerian victim of Boko Haram, attends a ceremony in Rome where the Colosseum was lit up in red to draw attention to the persecutio­n of Christians around the world.
AP PHOTO Rebecca Bitrus, a Nigerian victim of Boko Haram, attends a ceremony in Rome where the Colosseum was lit up in red to draw attention to the persecutio­n of Christians around the world.

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