Houston Chronicle Sunday

82 schoolgirl­s are reunited with families

Their return after 3 years held by Boko Haram was ‘like Christmas’

- By Lekan Oyekanmi

ABUJA, Nigeria — The 82 Nigerian schoolgirl­s recently released after more than three years in Boko Haram captivity reunited with their families Saturday as anxious parents looked for signs of how deeply the extremists had changed their daughters’ lives.

Brightly dressed families rushed through the crowd in the capital, Abuja, and embraced. One small group sank to their knees, with a woman raising her hands as if praising in church. Some danced. Others were in tears.

“I am really happy. Today, I am Christmas and new year. I am very happy and I thank God,” said mother Godiya Joshua, whose daughter, Esther, was among those freed.

This month’s release was the largest liberation of hostages since 276 Chibok schoolgirl­s were abducted from their boarding school in 2014. Five commanders from the extremist group were exchanged for the girls’ freedom, and Nigeria’s government has said it would make further exchanges to bring the 113 remaining schoolgirl­s home.

“Our joy is never complete until we see the complete 113, because one Chibok girl matters to all Chibok people,” said a parent of one of the freed schoolgirl­s, Yahi Bwata.

Many of the girls, most of them Christians, were forced to marry extremists and have had children. Some have been radicalize­d and have refused to return. It is feared that some have been used in suicide bombings.

The mass abduction in April 2014 brought internatio­nal attention to Boko Haram’s deadly insurgency in northern Nigeria, and it launched a global Bring Back Our Girls campaign that drew the backing of some celebritie­s, including former U.S. first lady Michelle Obama. Thousands have been kidnapped during the extremists’ eightyear insurgency, and more than 20,000 have been killed.

The release of the 82 schoolgirl­s this month came after an initial group of 21 girls was released in October. Nigeria’s government has acknowledg­ed negotiatin­g with Boko Haram for their release, with mediation help from the Swiss government and the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross.

The two groups of freed schoolgirl­s reunited earlier Saturday, Nigeria’s Channels TV reported, showing the young women laughing and embracing.

Since the latest release, many families in the remote Chibok community had been waiting for word on whether their daughters were among them. A government list of names circulated, and parents were asked to confirm the freed girls’ identities through photos.

Both groups of freed girls have been in government care in the capital as part of a nine-month reintegrat­ion program that President Mu ham ma du Buhari has said he will oversee personally. But human rights groups have criticized the government for keeping the young women so long in the capital, far from their homes.

 ?? Olamikan Gbemiga / Associated Press ?? Family members celebrate as they embrace a relative, one of the released kidnapped schoolgirl­s, in Abuja, Nigeria. In 2014, extremists kidnapped 276 girls from remote Chibok; 113 remain in captivity.
Olamikan Gbemiga / Associated Press Family members celebrate as they embrace a relative, one of the released kidnapped schoolgirl­s, in Abuja, Nigeria. In 2014, extremists kidnapped 276 girls from remote Chibok; 113 remain in captivity.

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