The Custodian April 17, 2014
Authorities
in Borno state denied on Thursday a statement by the armed forces which had
said most of the more than 100 schoolgirls abducted by Islamist rebels had been
freed in a military rescue operation.
“As I am
talking to you now, only 14 of the students have returned,” an aide to Borno
State Governor Kashim Shettima told Reuters, asking not to be named.
The
assertion directly contradicted a statement issued late on Wednesday by
national armed forces spokesman Major General Chris Olukolade in which he said
only eight of the students were still missing after the military operation.
The Borno
governor’s aide said the 14 girls found safe so far “escaped” and were not
rescued.
An uncle
of two of the teenagers who were snatched on Monday by Islamist Boko Haram
militants from the government secondary school at Chibok in Borno state said
the search was still going on.
“Two of
my nieces, Laraba and Hauwa, are still missing, … twenty other girls from our
village are missing,” Isaiah Rabo told Reuters by phone from Chibok. His
daughter was among those who escaped from the abductors.
There was
no immediate explanation for the contradictory versions regarding the mass
abduction of the schoolgirls aged between 15 and 18, which has shocked Nigeria.
Monday’s
raid on the Chibok school showed how the five-year-old Boko Haram insurgency
has brought lawlessness to swathes of the arid, poor northeast, killing
hundreds of people in recent months.
It
occurred the same day a bomb blast, also blamed on Boko Haram, killed 75 people
on the edge of the capital Abuja, stirring fears of violence spreading from the
north of Africa’s No. 1 oil producer and most populous nation.
President
Goodluck Jonathan was meeting his National Security Council on Thursday to
review the security situation.

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