The Columbus Dispatch

Girls held by militants start over

- By Dionne Searcey

YOLA, Nigeria — The list had more than 200 names.

Martha James. Grace Paul. Rebecca Joseph. Mary Ali. Ruth Kolo. And so many others.

It took Nigerian officials agonizing weeks to publish the names of all the students who Boko Haram had kidnapped from a boarding school in the village of Chibok four years ago, on the night of April 14. Once they did, the numbers were staggering.

The list quickly circulated among the grieving parents searching for their daughters, some setting out on motorbikes to confront the Islamist militants who had stormed the school, loaded the girls into trucks and hauled them away at gunpoint.

Soldiers used the list, too, as they combed the countrysid­e for the missing students, marching through the forest, dispatchin­g jets and enlisting the help of foreign militaries.

Negotiator­s checked the names as they bartered with militants for the girls’ release. And the list became an inspiratio­n for protesters hundreds of miles away in the capital, who kept marching for the girls’ return, day after day.

“As I began to read each name, my resolve strengthen­ed,” said Oby Ezekwesili, a former education minister who led protests. “They were not just statistics. These were real human beings.”

Overseas, public figures and celebritie­s joined the cause. Bring back our girls, they all demanded.

For years, the teenagers remained missing, changing from girls into women, lost to a band of extremists known for beating, raping and enslaving its captives.

And then, many of their names were joyfully crossed off the list.

“I’m ‘back,’ as they say,” said Hauwa Ntakai, one of the Chibok students.

Four years after they were abducted and dragged off to a forest hideout, more than 100 of the students from Chibok now live on a pristine

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