The
Presidency, yesterday, confirmed the release of 21 Chibok school girls,
following dialogue with leaders of Boko Haram, their abductors, after 911 days
in captivity. “We can confirm that 21 of the girls were released, safely, to us
by 5.30 this Thursday morning (yesterday) and they were flown to Kaduna from
the location of their release. This is the most glaring manifestation, to date,
of the unwavering commitment of Mr. President to secure safe release of the
girls and reunite them with their families. It is also a result of the
round-the-clock efforts by the administration to put a closure to the sad issue
of the kidnap of the girls. We expect the released girls to land in Abuja
shortly,’ the Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, said.
According
to the minster, “there is no truth in reports that the girls were swapped with
detained Boko Haram insurgents. The girls’ release was secured based on a very
delicate negotiation and confidence built over the time,” he stressed. It had
been earlier reported that the girls were freed in a swap for detained Boko
Haram leaders. According to the report, four detained Boko Haram leaders were
released on Wednesday night at Banki, a town on the northeast border with
Cameroon.
The girls were among the 219 students abducted by the insurgents in
Chibok, Borno State, on April 14, 2014. One of them, Amina Ali Nkeki, had
earlier this year, escaped from the abductors’ grip and was received by
President Muhammadu Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Abuja. Negotiations
failed last year, when Boko Haram demanded a ransom of $5.2 billion for the
girls’ freedom, according to a recently published authorized biography of
President Muhammadu Buhari by American historian, John Paden. Indeed, an elated
President Buhari, who jetted out to Germany, yesterday, welcomed the release of
the girls and promised to discuss the issue with the German Chancellor, Angela
Merkel. “As I depart Abuja for Germany on an official visit, I welcome the
release of 21 of our Chibok Girls, following successful negotiations,” Buhari
said on Twitter, a few minutes after the news broke out. “The Department of
State Services (DSS) has briefed me on the matter, and will continue to provide
updates. Cooperation on the security and
humanitarian situation in the Northeast will form a significant part of
my discussions with Chancellor Merkel,” he added. Freedom for the 21 girls
elicited joy in the Borno State Government House and from the Bring Back Our
Girls group, BBOG, which has been in the vanguard of the crusade to get the
girls freed. In the absence of President Buhari, the girls were received by
Vice President Yemi Osinbajo. Welcoming the girls, Osinbajo said: “Welcome back girls!” “I am sure you know
that the whole country has been waiting for you to come back, all these many months,
the whole country has been waiting that, one day, we will see you again and we
are very happy to see you back! “We are going to bring your parents, your
parents will be coming here to join you. “You can’t immediately be taken out of
here because we need to be sure that you are in very good health. “I am sure
you are going to be very well taken care of. We have provided very good
accommodation for you where you will stay, where you will sleep and your
parents will come and meet you there also. “We are also going to see to it that
everything that you require going forward, perhaps your education, those who
need to go back to school, those who need to find employment, we are going to
make that we make all the provisions for you.” Senior Special Assistant to the
President on Media and Publicity, Mallam Garba Shehu, who also confirmed the
release of the 21 girls, stated that the the girls, who were in the custody of
the DSS would be received by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo. The girls were
eventually received by Osinbajo and other dignitaries, including the First
Lady, Mrs. Aisha Buhari and Information Minister, Alhaji Lai Mohammed. The
names of released girls The 21 girls whose names were released, last night, by
the Presidency, included Mary Usman Bulama; Jummai John; Blessing Abana; Lugwa
Sanda; Comfort Habila; Maryam Basheer; Comfort Amos; Glory Mainta; Saratu
Emmanuel; Deborah Ja’afaru; Rahab Ibrahim and Helen Musa. Others are Maryamu
Lawan; Rebecca Ibrahim; Asabe Goni; Deborah Andrawus; Agnes Gapani; Saratu
Markus; Glory Dama; Pindah Nuhu; and Rebecca Mallam.
“The
release of the girls, in a limited number, is the outcome of negotiations
between the administration and the Boko Haram brokered by the International Red
Cross and the Swiss government. The negotiations will continue. The President
welcomes the release of the girls but cautioned Nigerians to be mindful of the
fact that more than 30,000 fellow citizens were killed via terrorism,” Shehu
said in a statement. FG assembles team of doctors, psychologists, others for
freed girls Ahead of the arrival of the girls in Abuja, Lai Mohammed told
journalists that the Federal Government had assembled a team of medical
doctors, psychologists, social workers, trauma experts, etc, to properly
examine the girls, especially because they had been in captivity for so long. He
also disclosed that government will adequately debrief the girls and had
started contacting their parents as part of the necessary verification
exercise. How the deal was struck On how the deal was struck, the minister
said: “We have been working on the safe release of the girls and following all
the leads available. In this instance, the moment we had a credible lead, Mr
President gave the green-light to the DSS to pursue it. We can confirm that the
DSS pursued the lead in collaboration with a friendly European country and a
renowned international humanitarian organization. The DSS was supported by the
military. “As soon as the necessary confidence was built on both sides, the
parties agreed on the date and the location of the release of the 21 girls. Please,
note that this is not a swap. It is a release, the product of painstaking
negotiations and trust on both sides. “We see this as a credible first step in
the eventual release of all the Chibok Girls in captivity. It is also a major
step in confidence-building between us as a government and the Boko Haram
leadership on the issue of the Chibok Girls.” Confirming the medical and
psychological attention the government was paying to the girls, Mr. Laolu
Akande, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo’s spokesman, in a tweet, said, the “FG is now gathering medical and
other support and care in Abuja for the just released 21 Chibok girls.” BBOG
lauds FG, urges adequate security for others The Bring Back Our Girls BBOG
movement has commended the Federal Government and its international partners
for yesterday’s “negotiated release of 21 of our abducted ChibokGirls.” In a
statement issued in Abuja, the BBOG said the action has further confirmed the
capacity of government to rescue all the girls. “We welcome reports from the Presidential
Spokesperson, Garba Shehu, of the negotiated release of 21 of our abducted
Chibok girls today. This wonderful development confirms what we have always
known about the capacity of our government to rescue our Chibok girls. The
movement further asked the Federal Government to ensure the safety and
well-being of those still in captivity. Borno govt expresses joy The Borno
State Government also expressed happiness over the release of the 21 Chibok schoolgirls. Speaking on the
development, Governor, Kashim Shettima,
in a statement by Malam Isa Gusau, spokesman to the Borno Governor,
said: “As people of Borno State troubled by the deaths and destruction of Boko
Haram insurgency, one of our major sources of strength since May 29, 2015, has
been the undiluted sincerity we saw in President Muhammadu Buhari based on his
administration’s absolutely genuine commitment towards recovering our
schoolgirls, thousands of other women and children held in captivity, as well
as ending the insurgency in order to secure the lives of our citizens and make
way for reconstruction, resettlement and other development programmes and
projects. “We had faith in Buhari from the very day he took off as President.
The steps he kept on taking in dealing with the insurgency continuously proved
his sincerity. If any Nigerian or members of the international community had
doubts about the sincerity and commitment of President Muhammadu Buhari to the
rescue of our precious daughters abducted by Boko Haram insurgents at
Government Secondary School, Chibok on April 14, 2014, the rescue of all other
abducted Nigerians and very importantly, his sincerity in working towards
ending the Boko Haram insurgency, such doubts must by now be laid to rest.
Governor Shettima left Abuja with President Muhammadu Buhari’ as part of the
Presidential delegation to Germany. Saraki, Harriman, others hail girls’
freedom Senate President Bukola Saraki hailed President Buhari for the release
of the 21 Chibok schoolgirls, just as he restated the commitment of the Senate
to support the Federal Government to secure the release of the other girls. In
a statement from his Media office, yesterday, the Senate President said: “We join all Nigerians to rejoice on the
return of our daughters. Our thoughts and prayers remain with the families of
those who have returned, and those girls who remain in the hands of the
terrorists. It is our hope that the release of more of the girls is imminent
and that our nation remains vigilant in the face of the continued crisis in
North East Nigeria.” Former member of the House of Representatives and All
Progressives Congress, APC, chieftain, Temi Harriman, also praised the tenacity
of purpose of the Bring Back Our Girls group, saying their patriotism should be
well emulated.
Harriman,
who noted that two of the kidnapped girls, Hauwa Ali 16, and Zainab Yaga 17, at
the time of the abduction, were siblings of two of her aides, commended the
sacrifice of the BBOG in its advocacy. Founder-President of the Wellbeing
Foundation Africa, Mrs Toyin Saraki, said the news that 21 Chibok girls were
released by Boko Haram to the Nigerian government was cheery. “I am delighted
to learn, from preliminary news reports, of the release of 21 girls abducted in
the north-east of Nigeria 911 days ago. This news, coming just two days after
the International Day of the Girl Child, is a testament to the perseverance and
a testimony to the persistence of all efforts to find our missing girls, and we
are grateful for their restoration to freedom. “In the coming days, weeks,
months, and years, we hope the 21 released girls, 18 of whom are reported to be
nursing mothers, and all other victims of forcible disappearances around the
world, will receive the necessary psycho-social counselling, in efforts to
ensure their holistic rehabilitation and well-being,” she said. Release of
Chibok girls diversionary, address hunger, Fayose tells FG Ekiti State
Governor, Mr Ayodele Fayose, described the celebration of the Federal
Government over the release of 21 Chibok girls by the Boko Haram, as not only
diversionary but also a tactic to divert the attention of Nigerians away from
the hunger and outrage generated by crackdown on judges. The governor said:
“Nigerians have had enough of anti-corruption war,” adding that it is high time
President Buhari addressed massive hunger killing many people in the country.
Fayose said this, yesterday, at the commissioning of a three-block classrooms
built at the Erelu Adebayo Children’s Home in Iyin Ekiti, Irepodun/Ifelodun
Local Government Area as part of activities marking his second year in office.
In his words: “What they came out today to tell Nigerians that 21 abducted
Chibok girls have been released by the Boko Haram group is diversionary. Nigerians have never had it so bad. People
are very hungry. What they did today is just to divert attention from what they
did last week by clamping judges and justices into detention. While no one is
saying corruption should be condoned, the due process must be followed.” Tinubu
congratulates Buhari The news of the release of the 21 Chibok girls came to me
as a delightful relief. I congratulate the families of these young ladies who
have endured so much anxiety and pain on account of this horrendous experience.
I am also grateful that these budding young stars now have the opportunity to
again pursue their dreams and aspirations. I know there is road to recovery and
readjustment ahead, but I am confident that the support of their families, our
communities, and the assistance of our many collaborators at home, and
internationally provided the tools required for this. I also congratulate and
thank President Buhari for his steadfastness and dogged effort in ensuring the
release of these girls. I salute our gallant men and women in uniform who
continue to make sacrifices on our behalf and have remained focused in the hot
pursuit of the terrorists.”
Source:
Vanguard
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