Arab News

Nigeria negotiatin­g with Boko Haram for more Chibok releases

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DAKAR: Nigeria’s government is negotiatin­g “seriously” for the release of more than 110 kidnapped Chibok schoolgirl­s still held by Boko Haram and will exchange more detained members of the extremist group for them if needed, an official said.

“We will not relent until all are back,” Aisha Alhassan, minister of women’s affairs and social developmen­t, said in Abuja.

The mass abduction of nearly 300 schoolgirl­s from a boarding school three years ago brought world atten- tion to Boko Haram’s deadly rampage in northern Nigeria. Thousands have been kidnapped or killed in the group’s eight- year insurgency, with millions driven from their homes.

On Saturday, 82 of the Chibok schoolgirl­s were released. Nigeria’s government exchanged them for five detained Boko Haram commanders, according to an official.

Negotiatio­ns with the extremist group, mediated by the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross and the Swiss government, also resulted in the October release of a first group of 21 Chibok girls.

Alhassan said Nigeria’s government had no regrets about exchanging Boko Haram commanders for the schoolgirl­s’ release.

“We will do it again if needed,” she said in comments tweeted by Nigeria’s government.

Families in Chibok were meeting with community leaders to identify the newly freed schoolgirl­s from photos to determine if they will travel to the capital to meet them.

The young women were joining those released earlier in government care in Abuja, where they were undergoing medical screening that will take a couple of weeks, Alhassan said. Some must undergo surgery, she said.

The government has been caring for 24 previously released girls and four babies, Alhassan said.

A small number of the schoolgirl­s managed to escape on their own.

The group of girls released in October were in “bad shape” and spent two months in medical care, the minister said.

Human rights groups have criticized the government for keeping them so long in the capital, far from their homes. Alhassan said they traveled to Chibok for Christmas but upon their return to the capital said they were scared to go back to their community.

The girls said they wanted to go back to school so a nine- month reintegrat­ion program was designed for them, the minister said. The newly released girls will join the program.

The parents of the freed Chibok schoolgirl­s “are free to visit them at any time. We will never prevent them from seeing their daughters,” Alhassan said.

Some of the girls, who escaped shortly after the mass kidnapping, said some classmates had died from illness, and others were radicalize­d and did not want to go home.

Human rights advocates have said they fear some of the girls have been used by Boko Haram to carry out suicide bombings.

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