Chicago Sun-Times

Militants return 104 of 110 girls abducted from Nigerian school

- Ali Abare Abubakar

LAGOS, Nigeria – Boko Haram extremists returned most of the 110 girls they kidnapped a month ago from their school in northeaste­rn Nigeria, the Nigerian government said Wednesday.

Fighters from the militant group drove into the northern town of Dapchi in nine vans and dropped the girls off early Wednesday, just after Nigerian soldiers withdrew, said Alhaji Baba Shehu, a resident, and other witnesses.

“( Some) girls ran away to their home before being counted,” he said. “Still, we are happy. God has answered our prayers and our daughters are back.”

Nigeria’s government said 104 of the 110 schoolgirl­s were confirmed as freed.

The minister of Informatio­n and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, said no ransom was paid. He said the release was obtained through “backchanne­l efforts” after “a pause in operations” and with the help of “some friends of the country.”

He said negotiatio­ns for the release of the remaining girls continue.

On Feb. 19, Boko Haram attacked the Government Girls Science Technical College attended by the girls as part of its ongoing campaign to terrorize schools and villages. The group’s name means “Western education is forbidden” in the Hausa language.

As the extremists dropped off the girls Wednesday, they told residents: “This is a warning to you all,” The Associated Press reported. “We did it out of pity. And don’t ever put your daughters in school again.”

The government this week had already closed down boarding schools in the area out of fear of further kidnapping­s.

Parents on Wednesday headed for the town, hoping their children had been freed.

Hajiya Aisa Bukar, 35, said her daughter, Aisha Kachalla, was among those returned. She took her to a hospital in Dapchi before the Nigerian military arrived. “I’m more than excited,” Bukar said. “I’m so happy to be with my daughter.”

Bukar said she saw the Boko Haram convoy of vans drop off the girls near the Dapchi market square. The militants were clearly unafraid and in control, she said.

“One of them waved a black flag with Islamic inscriptio­n,” she said. “They stopped to take pictures with our youth.”

Residents and parents had become angry over how the govern- ment handled the latest kidnapping: It initially denied the students were abducted, then told parents the day after the abductions that most of the girls had been released.

An Amnesty Internatio­nal report released Tuesday accused the Nigerian military of failing to listen to warnings of an imminent attack. The military claimed the report was not true.

The Nigerian army claimed last year that Boko Haram had been defeated in military terms, although not eliminated.

The February abduction brought back painful memories of the 2014 attack on a boarding school in Chibok. Boko Haram kidnapped 276 girls, 100 of whom remain missing.

Hundreds of thousands of people worldwide called for action using # BringBackO­urGirls on social media after that kidnapping. Then- first lady Michelle Obama held up a sign with the slogan.

 ?? AMINU ABUBAKAR/ AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Zahra Bukar, 13, Fatima Abdu, 14, Fatima Abdulkarim, 15, and Yagana Mustapha, 15, arrive at the home of a classmate in Dapchi on Feb. 28 after escaping from Boko Haram kidnappers at the Government Girls Science Technical College.
AMINU ABUBAKAR/ AFP/ GETTY IMAGES Zahra Bukar, 13, Fatima Abdu, 14, Fatima Abdulkarim, 15, and Yagana Mustapha, 15, arrive at the home of a classmate in Dapchi on Feb. 28 after escaping from Boko Haram kidnappers at the Government Girls Science Technical College.

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