The Borneo Post

Nigeria was warned before Boko Haram abduction — Amnesty

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LAGOS: Nigeria’s military was yesterday accused of ignoring repeated warnings about the movements of Boko Haram fighters before they kidnapped 110 schoolgirl­s in the country’s restive northeast.

The students — the youngest of whom is aged just 10 — were seized from the town of Dapchi, Yobe state, on Feb 19 in virtually identical circumstan­ces to those in Chibok in 2014.

Then, more than 200 schoolgirl­s were taken in an attack that brought sustained world attention on the Islamist insurgency and sparked a global campaign for their release.

President Muhammadu Buhari has called the Dapchi abduction a “national disaster” and vowed to use negotiatio­n rather than force to secure their release.

But as in Chibok nearly four years ago, human rights group Amnesty Internatio­nal claimed the military was warned about the arrival of the heavily-armed jihadists — yet failed to act.

In the hours that followed both attacks, the authoritie­s also tried to claim the girls had not been abducted.

Amnesty’s Nigeria director Osa Ojigho said “no lessons appear to have been learned” from Chibok and called for an immediate probe into what she called ‘inexcusabl­e security lapses’.

“The government’s failure in this incident must be investigat­ed and the findings made public — and it is absolutely crucial that any investigat­ion focuses on the root causes,” she added.

“Why were insufficie­nt troops available? Why was it decided to withdraw troops? What measures have the government taken to protect schools in northeast Nigeria?

“And what procedures are supposed to be followed in response to an attempted abduction?”

There was no immediate response from the Nigerian military when contacted by AFP.

Amnesty said that between 2.00pm and 6.00pm on Feb 19, at least five calls were made to tell the security services that Islamist fighters were in the Dapchi area.

Locals spotted about 50 members of the Islamic State group affiliate in a convoy of nine vehicles in Futchimira­m, about 30 kilometres from Dapchi, then at Gumsa.

In Gumsa, where Boko Haram stayed unt i l about 5.0 0pm, residents phoned ahead to Dapchi to warn them. The convoy arrived at about 6.30pm and left about 90 minutes later.

Amnesty, whose researcher­s spoke to about 23 people and three security officials, said the army command in Geidam had told callers they were aware of the situation and were monitoring. — AFP

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