Sowetan

Word of rescue lifts those close to abducted girls

Some pupils left in jihadist truck after breakdown

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Dapchi, Nigeria – The families of dozens of girls missing for several days after a Boko Haram attack on their school in northeast Nigeria waited anxiously for their return yesterday after the state government and military said some had been rescued.

Police said on Wednesday that 111 girls from the staterun boarding school in Dapchi, Yobe state, were unaccounte­d for following an attack by the jihadists on Monday night.

The disappeara­nce sparked fears of a repeat of the 2014 mass kidnapping of more than 200 girls from a similar school in Chibok, in neighbouri­ng Borno state.

Abdullahi Bego, spokesman for Yobe state governor Ibrahim Gaidam, said late on Wednesday that “some of the girls ... have been rescued by gallant officers and men of the Nigerian Army from the terrorists who abducted them”.

“The rescued girls are now in the custody of the Nigerian Army.”

Bego’s statement was the first official acknowledg­ement the girls were abducted. Initially, the pupils were reported to have fled with their teachers at the sound of gunfire. Families in Dapchi claimed the authoritie­s tried to cover up the abduction.

Bego did not specify the circumstan­ces in which the girls were rescued nor how many were recovered, and said more details would be released in due course.

A federal government delegation including Nigeria’s defence and foreign ministers was due in Dapchi yesterday.

Inuwa Mohammed, whose 16-year-old daughter Falmata was missing, said he had “mixed feelings of hope and trepidatio­n” about the girls’ return.

“We don’t know how many of our girls have been found and no parent is sure that his daughter is among them.

“We are just waiting for the girls to be brought for physical identifica­tion to be carried out by parents ... There have been wild guesses as to their number. We will wait until we see them.”

Abubakar Shehu said he too did not want to celebrate prematurel­y.

“I haven’t slept throughout last night. I have been tense since I heard,” he said. “I am just praying that my niece is among those rescued.”

Yusuf Hassan, whose 16year-old sister Fatima Isah was among the missing, said: “For me the fight is not over until my sister is handed over to me.”

A pupil who escaped Monday’s attack said some of her classmates had jumped over a perimeter wall at the sound of gunfire, and got into vehicles parked nearby.

It was thought the vehicles were then taken by the Islamist militants.

A senior military source in the Borno state capital, Maiduguri, said the girls from Dapchi were “found ... on the border between Yobe and Borno”.

“The girls were abandoned with their vehicle. It had broken down and the terrorists panicked because they were under siege by pursuing soldiers,” he said.

“The fear is that some of the other girls may have been taken along by the terrorists because the girls were not in a single vehicle.

“Only those in the broken down vehicle were lucky.”

Residents said fighters dressed in military fatigues and turbans arrived unchalleng­ed in a convoy of vehicles, firing weapons and shouting “Allahu Akbar [God is greatest]”.

Safai Maimagani, a herbal medicine vendor, said the militants headed towards the school. “Not long afterwards, they returned,” he said. “I heard shrieks of girls from the lorry.”

The Dapchi attack calls into question how far pledges to improve security at schools have been implemente­d nearly four years after the Chibok abduction.

Since May last year, 107 of the 219 held since 2014 have either escaped or been released as part of a government-brokered deal.

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