The Custodian April 30, 2014
Nigerian parents lashed out on Tuesday at the government’s
failure to rescue scores of schoolgirls kidnapped two weeks ago by Boko Haram
Islamists, as a local leader claimed the hostages had been sold as wives
abroad.
“May God curse every one of
those who have failed to free our girls,” said Enoch Mark, whose daughter and
two nieces were among the more than 234 students abducted from the Government
Girls Secondary School in the Chibok area of northeastern Borno state.
The parents outrage came as
Pogo Bitrus, leader of a Chibok elders group said the captured girls are being
offered to Boko Haram fighters at $12 each.
Bitrus said that locals had
been tracking the movements of the hostages with the help of “various sources”
across the northeast.
“From the information we received yesterday from Cameroonian
border towns our abducted girls were taken… into Chad and Cameroon,” he said.
The girls were then sold as
brides to Islamist fighters for 2,000 naira ($12) each, Bitrus added.
The attack was one of the
most shocking in Boko Haram’s five-year uprising, which has claimed thousands
of lives across northern and central Nigeria.
The outrage that followed the
mass abduction has been compounded by disputes over how many girls were seized
and criticism of the military’s search-and-rescue effort.
Borno officials have said
that 129 girls were kidnapped when gunmen stormed the school after sundown on
April 14 and forced the students — who are between 12 and 17 years old — onto a
convoy of trucks. Officials said 52 have since escaped.
Locals, including the
school’s principal, have rejected those numbers, insisting that 230 students
were snatched and that 187 are still being held hostage.
Mark told AFP that his wife
has hardly slept since the attack, lying awake at night “thinking about our
daughter”.
Some of the girls who escaped
have said the hostages were taken to Borno’s Sambisa Forest area, where Boko
Haram has well-fortified camps.
Boko Haram’s name translates
as “Western education is forbidden”, and it has repeatedly attacked schools
during an insurgency aimed at creating a strict Islamic state in mainly Muslim
northern Nigeria.
The Islamists have set
schools on fire, massacred students in their sleep and detonated bombs at
university campus churches.
President Goodluck Jonathan
has faced scathing criticism over the attacks and the pressure has mounted
since the Chibok kidnappings.
Locals have scoured the
bushlands of the remote region, pooling money to buy fuel for motorcycles and
cars to conduct their own rescue effort, saying they have no confidence in the
military’s search.
“The free movement of the
kidnappers in huge convoys with their captives for two weeks without being
traced by the military which claims to be working diligently to free the girls
is unbelievable,” Bitrus told AFP.
Nigeria deployed thousands of
additional troops to the northeast last year as part of an offensive aimed at
crushing Boko Haram, but security experts say the military lacks the troops
needed to fully cover the region.
The defence ministry on
Friday said it had killed 40 insurgents near Sambisa Forest in an operation
aimed at finding the kidnappers.
An organisation called Women
for Peace and Justice has called for a “million-woman protest march” in the
capital Abuja on Wednesday to demand that more resources be committed to
securing the girls’ release.
While the group is unlikely
to rally a crowd of that size, support for the movement has been growing on
Twitter under #BringBackOurGirls.
“How is it possible in the
age of drones and Google Maps and aerial shots that over 200 girls will vanish
without a trace,” protest organiser Hadiza Bala Usman said in a statement.
Security sources have said it
is possible the Islamists are using the hostages as sexual and domestic slaves.
Amid the rumours and lack of
information, Mark said he feared some of the affected families “may take the
law into their own hands”, while others may decide they can no longer cope.
“It is not everyone who can
absorb this grief.”

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