Bangkok Post

Kidnapped Chibok girl refused to go home

-

ABUJA: A schoolgirl who was among more than 200 kidnapped by Boko Haram in 2014 refused to be part of a release deal because she is now married to a militant fighter, Nigeria’s government said on Tuesday.

The disclosure underlines the complex psychologi­cal effects of a lengthy captivity, and gives an indication of the work required to rehabilita­te and reintegrat­e those released.

Boko Haram has used kidnapping as a weapon of war, seizing thousands of women and girls as part of its eight-year quest to create a hardline Islamic state in northeast Nigeria.

Men and boys have also been forcibly recruited to fight in its insurgency, which since 2009 has killed at least 20,000 in Nigeria alone.

Presidency spokesman Garba Shehu said the jihadists had initially agreed to release 83 of the teenagers who were abducted from their school in the town of Chibok in April 2014.

But he told the local Channels television station: “One said: ‘No, I have a husband. I’m happy where I am’. And then 82 came back.”

The 82 girls were released on Saturday following months of negotiatio­ns and the exchange of a number of suspected militants held in government custody.

Twenty-one of their classmates were freed in October; three had previously been found or escaped. Talks are understood to have started to free all or some of the remaining 113.

Testimony from former hostages in the brutal conflict has revealed that Boko Haram forced many women and young girls into marriage, and that rape and sexual violence were commonplac­e.

Some were forced to work as domestic slaves for extremist fighters and even deployed to the front line carrying ammunition during attacks.

Elizabeth Pearson, a Boko Haram specialist who studies women and conflict, said the case of the Chibok girl who refused to leave was “likely to be quite prevalent”.

“From what we know of other young women who’ve returned, the relationsh­ips with their captors is very complex and at times quite ambiguous,” she said in an email exchange.

“We assume because they are abducted they are therefore likely to resist their captors. In fact they have to develop relationsh­ips of some sort in order to survive.”

Genuine relationsh­ips will emerge, as not all fighters behave brutally to the women in the camps, particular­ly if children are involved, she added.

“It’s a much more complex situation than the abducted-rescued-victim narrative we’ve seen at times,” she said.

There have been repeated calls for more to be done to support those released, particular­ly with many women treated as social outcasts because of their time with the rebels.

Mr Shehu said the government was working to verify the identities of the 82 released so they can be reunited with their families as soon as possible.

A list of the girls’ names was published on Sunday evening and photograph­s of them have been sent to Chibok and the surroundin­g area for cross-checking.

“When we had the first 21, because of similariti­es in names, more than two, three sets of parents came to Abuja. So, we don’t want to create that confusion,” he said.

“When they get the pictures, they see them and verify, then they come on board to Abuja to see their daughters.”

Aisha Yesufu, coordinato­r of t he #BringBackO­urGirls pressure group, said: “We have to reach out to the parents and ensure that we match the parents and the daughters.

“We are still working on it.”

 ?? AFP ?? Some of the recently released girls from Chibok wait in Abuja on Monday. The teenage girls, who were among more than 200 kidnapped by Boko Haram, were freed on Saturday after a prisoner swap agreed with the Islamist group.
AFP Some of the recently released girls from Chibok wait in Abuja on Monday. The teenage girls, who were among more than 200 kidnapped by Boko Haram, were freed on Saturday after a prisoner swap agreed with the Islamist group.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand