Houston Chronicle

Nigeria’s president reiterates pledge to return abducted girls

- By Dionne Searcey

DAKAR, Senegal — Some of the young women are thriving at a new school. Some have returned home to their family farms. But the fates of more than 100 other students who were kidnapped from a school in northeaste­rn Nigeria are unknown, five years after militants from Boko Haram abducted them.

On Sunday, the fifth anniversar­y of the kidnapping­s from the village of Chibok, President Muhammadu Buhari reiterated a pledge he had made years ago to bring back all the students.

“We will not rest until all the remaining girls are back and reunited with their families,” he said on his official Twitter account. “I made this promise when I became President, and I will keep it.”

In 2014, Boko Haram militants stormed a girls’ school in Chibok and made off with more than 200 girls who were boarding there to take exams the next day — an act that gained widespread attention across the world with the social media hashtag #BringBackO­urGirls advocating their release.

Buhari’s message came after months of silence on the topic, which barely registered in campaign discourse during a heated presidenti­al election this year. The kidnapping­s, which riveted a global audience at the time, seem all but forgotten by the outside world.

Protesters who once marched daily at Unity Fountain in Abuja, Nigeria’s capital, have been quiet. Activists both locally and globally who had held signs and tweeted have mostly gone silent.

Yet the missing students remain constantly on the minds of their parents, who gathered Sunday at the site of the school in Chibok to offer prayers for their return.

“They are losing hope,” said Allen Manasa, a spokesman for the village, adding that in five years the government had yet to brief the parents about their missing daughters.

He said the community urged “mounting pressure on the Nigerian government to explore all available means to rescue these girls.”

Buhari’s message Sunday sought to reassure Nigerians that he hadn’t forgotten.

“We will never give up on our missing daughters,” Buhari wrote on Twitter, also citing other hostages taken by Boko Haram. “In the last four years our security agencies have successful­ly rescued thousands of captives, and they will not relent until every captive is free.”

 ?? Audu Ai Marte / AFP/Getty Images ?? Parents and relatives of Chibok girls abducted by Boko Haram jihadists “are losing hope” that the 112 girls who are still missing will be rescued, said Allen Manasa, a spokesman for the village.
Audu Ai Marte / AFP/Getty Images Parents and relatives of Chibok girls abducted by Boko Haram jihadists “are losing hope” that the 112 girls who are still missing will be rescued, said Allen Manasa, a spokesman for the village.

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