One of the hundreds of Chibok
schoolgirls kidnapped 18 months ago by Boko Haram militants reportedly escaped
from the terrorist group's stronghold and told of her fellow captives' ongoing
misery, but a military official disputed the claim.
The April 14, 2014, kidnapping
of 276 girls from the northern town of Chibok prompted international headlines
and a social media campaign made prominent by First Lady Michelle Obama calling
for authorities to "Bring back our girls." While dozens fled in the
initial months following capture, the unidentified girl would be the most recent
victim to escape the infamous Islamic terror group's clutches. According to
local reports, she said dozens of girls are still alive, many pregnant from
rape and riddled with disease.
"All of us were forced to
become Muslims but kept in camps far from each other," the girl reportedly
told The Vanguard. "You can only see and recognize those in your camp as
any of us who refused being Islamized was either beheaded or shot at point
blank range."
"All of us were forced to
become Muslims but kept in camps far from each other."
- Reported Boko Haram victim
The report claimed the girl was
able to escape from her captors at a Boko Haram camp in the dense Sambisa
forest in the northern Borno state, near Chad, and run into the safety of local
herdsman.
"When the Fulani herdsman
saw the girl in the bush and questioned her about her mission, she narrated her
experience, which made the herdsman to take her to the soldiers in that area,”
an unidentified source reportedly told the Nigerian newspaper. “With her
escape, there are now 59 of the girls left in her camp."
Although The Vangaurd reported
that the girl was taken to a local military base for debriefing, a military
official called dismissed the claim as "a spurious report" that
"should be disregarded."
The issue could be a sensitive
one, as the Nigerian military has been under intense pressure to save the girls
and crack down on the terrorist group, which has committed dozens of atrocities
in the northern part of the country. If an escapee has conveyed useful
information, it is possible the government wanted to keep it under wraps.
The girl reportedly told
authorities the remaining captives are being held in half a dozen towns located
in the border communities around Lake Chad, which sits on the border of Nigeria
and Chad.
Boko Haram, whose name
translates to "Western education is forbidden," has pledged
allegiance to ISIS, though its reach has not extended far from northern
Nigeria. Although the group had committed previous mass atrocities, including
an attack a month before the mass kidnapping in which 29 boys at a boarding
school were locked in the building and burned alive, the Chibok incident drew
unprecedented international condemnation.
Boko Haram was believed to have
taken the abductees to its stronghold in the Samibisa national forest. Many of
the girls are believed to have been sold into slavery.
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