In keeping faith with its promise, the President Muhammadu Buhari
government, saturday, secured the release of additional 82 Chibok girls,
bringing the number of abducted Chibok girls that the administration
has been able to secure their release since coming to office in 2015 to
106.Yesterday’s release was the outcome of the ongoing negotiations with the Boko Haram leadership on the release of the girls captured since April 2014. Although full details of the terms of release were not out as at the time of filing this report, astatement last night by the Senior Special Assistant to President Muhammadu Buhari on Media and Publicity, Malam Garba Shehu, said that the girls were released in exchange for some Boko Haram suspects who were hitherto held by authorities.
Shehu who noted that President Buhari
was pleased to announce the release of the girls said the president had
expressed his gratitude to security agencies, the military, the
government of Switzerland, the Red Cross, local and international
non-governmental organisations (NGOs) for their fruitful negotiations.
He also disclosed that the freed girls would be formally received by Buhari in Abuja today (Sunday).
He added that the release was a
follow-up to the earlier freedom of 21 girls in October last year, after
which he said the president tasked security agencies to sustain their
efforts until all the girls were freed and reunited with their families.
He said the president had since then
been receiving briefings from the Director-General of Department of
State Services (DSS), Lawal Daura, on progress of the negotiations.
The statement reads: “The President is
pleased to announce that negotiations to release more of the Chibok
Girls have born fruits with the release of 82 more Girls today. After
months of patient negotiations, our security agencies have taken back
these abducted girls in exchange for some Boko Haram suspects held by
the authorities.
“The Girls are due tomorrow
in Abuja to be received by the President. The President expressed his
deep gratitude to security agencies, the military, the government of
Switzerland, the Red Cross, local and international NGOs for the success
of this operation.
“It may be recalled that when the first
batch of 21 Girls were released in October last year, the President
directed the security agencies to continue in earnest until all the
Chibok Girls have been released and reunited with their families. The
President has been receiving full reports from the
Director-General of
the State Security Services at each stage of the operation.”
Apart from the statement issued last
night by the state House, no other government official was willing to
give additional information or agreed to be quoted.
Newsmen however
gathered that upon their release, the girls were initially camped in
Banki town in the North East part of the country, where they were
awaiting further instructions before they were air-lifted to another
location, for debriefing and compulsory medical checkup.
There were also indication that the
processes leading to the release of the 82 girls were kept secret as
several senior government officials contacted by newsmen when the news
broke could not confirm the release of the girls.
For instance, the Director of Defence
Information, Major General John Enenche, told newsmen that the DHQ was
yet to ascertain the true situation of things as far as the release of
the girls was concerned.
When contacted also, the presidential
spokesperson, Mr. Femi Adeshina, could not confirm too, as he said he
was awaiting details of the negotiations before he could be armed to
give information on the development. He however promised to do so
immediately he was availed details of the release.
In similar breath, spokesperson for
Governor Kashim Shettima of Borno State, Isa Gusau, said he had no
information and could not reach his principal on phone and as such he
could not confirm their release.
But a source in the Ministry of
Information and Culture was the first to confirm the development and to
also give the correct figure of 82 as against the 80 that a majority of
the online news portal had earlier published.
The source described the news as another
promise kept by the Buhari government, adding that while critics of the
administration would naturally fail to see or acknowledge a feat as
exciting as the release of more Chibok girls, the government and its
functionaries are not unaware of their efforts and would continue to do
more.
Boko Haram had seized 276 female
students from the Government Secondary School in Chibok on the night of
April 14, 2014. About 57 of the girls managed to escape in the immediate
aftermath of the abduction.
Negotiations between the federal
government and Boko Haram had led to the release of 21 of the girls
while another three were freed by soldiers. Dozens of others had escaped
on their own.
Despite losing most of the territory
they controlled at some point, including the dreaded Sambisa forest to
Nigerian troops, the insurgents kept hold of an estimated 195 girls,
with some of them already feared dead.
But Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo had
disclosed last month that negotiations were ongoing for the release of
more Chibok schoolgirls still in the custody of the deadly terror group.
“There is a lot of negotiation going
on,” he had said at an interaction with journalists and activists at the
State House in Abuja in April.
Expressing optimism that the dialogue
would yield the desired result in due course, Osinbajo had said
government had “gone quite far” with negotiations to free more girls.
Newsmen gathered that the release
process was slow because of the existence of two factions in Boko Haram,
with each faction holding on to some of the girls.
One of the factions is led by Abubakar
Shekau, the erstwhile leader of the group, while a breakaway faction is
led by Abu Musab al-Barnawi, believed to be a son of the late founder of
the group, Mohammed Yusuf.
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