The Borneo Post

Boko Haram kills another aid worker in northeast Nigeria

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ABUJA: Islamic State- allied Boko Haram jihadists have killed another kidnapped female aid worker in northeast Nigeria, the government said, a month after one of her colleagues was murdered.

Three female health workers were kidnapped during a Boko Haram raid on the remote town of Rann, in Borno state, on March 1 that killed three other aid workers and eight Nigerian soldiers.

Two of the kidnapped women, Hauwa Liman and Saifura Khorsa, worked for the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), while the third, Alice Loksha, worked for the UN children’s agency, Unicef.

There had been no news of the trio until last month when the ICRC said it had received footage of Khorsa’s killing from the IS- backed Boko Haram faction Islamic State West Africa Province ( Iswap).

Iswap then threatened to kill Liman and Loksha, as well as a 15-year- old Christian schoolgirl Leah Sharibu who was kidnapped from the town of Dapchi, in Yobe state, in February.

The ICRC last weekend appealled for the captives’ release and for the jihadists to show mercy, as they were ‘doing nothing but helping communitie­s’ in the conflict-riven region.

But Nigeria’s Informatio­n Minister Lai Mohammed announced the latest death as a deadline expired and said the government was ‘shocked and saddened’ at the unjustifie­d killing, calling it ‘dastardly, inhuman and ungodly’.

He did not initially identify the victim but later added in a tweet that he ‘commiserat­ed with the family of Hauwa Liman’.

The ICRC said it did not have official confirmati­on, adding: “We desperatel­y hope not. We will provide an update when we have accurate informatio­n.

“This situation is heartbreak­ing, and our thoughts remain with her family,” it added.

Mohammed said: “It is very unfortunat­e that it has come to this. Before and after the deadline issued by her abductors, the federal government did everything any responsibl­e government should do to save the aid worker.

“As we have been doing since these young women were abducted, we kept the line of negotiatio­ns open all through. In all the negotiatio­ns, we acted in the best interest of the women and the country as a whole.

“We are deeply pained by this killing, just like we were by the recent killing of the first aid worker.

“However, we will keep the negotiatio­ns open and continue to work to free the innocent women who remain in the custody of their abductors.”

More than 27,000 people have been killed in northeast Nigeria since the Boko Haram insurgency began in 2009, while nearly two million remain homeless. — AFP

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