The Boko Haram jihadist
group has released a video claiming to show Chibok schoolgirls who
refused to be rescued as part of a recent swap deal with the Nigerian
government.
In the three-minute video, a woman who claims to be Maida Yakubu, one of
the 276 schoolgirls kidnapped by Boko Haram in April 2014, is seen
wearing a black veil and holding a gun.
Flanked by three other women clad in black, she proclaims her loyalty to
Boko Haram, which has been fighting the government since 2009 in an
insurgency that has killed over 20,000 people.
When asked by a man in the background why she does not want to return
home to her parents, she replies: “The reason is that they live in the
town of unbelief. We want them to accept Islam.”
The woman then speaks in the local Chibok dialect for the rest of the
video.
But the woman’s mother believes she did so under duress.
“For me, this video is torture,” Esther Muntari told AFP on Saturday
from Chibok. “I haven’t slept since I watched it
The tie that binds us is unbreakable. It’s just not possible that my
daughter prefers her kidnappers to me,” said the mother of five. Maida
is the oldest at 19.
Muntari said the woman mentioned Islam, she “immediately understood that
she had been forced to say what she said in the video”.
Last week, 82 schoolgirls who were kidnapped three years ago were
released in exchange for imprisoned Boko Haram members after
negotiations between the extremist group and the government.
Presidency spokesman Garba Shehu later disclosed that one girl had
refused to leave, saying she had married a Boko Haram fighter.
Analysts said it was likely that others may have developed sympathies
for their captors over time.
“The video has instilled fear in our minds and has somewhat dampened our
hope that our girls will be freed,” Enoch Mark, whose two children are
missing, told AFP.
“I don’t think any of our girls would choose to stay with Boko Haram if
they were given a choice,” Mark said. “The only explanation” is that
Maida was “forced to stay”.
– ‘Complex situation’ –
Testimony from former hostages in the brutal conflict has revealed that
Boko Haram forced many women and young girls into marriage, and that
rape and sexual violence were commonplace.
Some were forced to work as domestic slaves for extremist fighters and
even deployed to the front line carrying ammunition during attacks.
“From what we know of other young women who’ve returned, the
relationship with their captors is very complex and at times quite
ambiguous,” Elizabeth Pearson, a Boko Haram specialist who studies women
and conflict, told AFP in an email exchange last week.
Genuine relationships will emerge, as not all fighters behave brutally
to the women in the camps, particularly if children are involved, she
added.
“It’s a much more complex situation than the abducted-rescued-victim
narrative we’ve seen at times,” she said.
The Islamist militants seized the Chibok girls in April 2014, prompting
global condemnation and drawing attention to the bloody insurgency.
Fifty-seven escaped in the immediate aftermath. Of the 219 who did not
manage to flee, 106 have either been released or found, leaving 113
still missing.
– ‘Mere propaganda’ –
Boko Haram also released a second video on Friday claiming to show five
commanders that the Nigerian government freed in exchange for the 82
Chibok girls.
In the video, a man who identifies himself as Abu Dardaa, or Money, says
Boko Haram has returned to Sambisa Forest, which was long its
stronghold in Borno State, and is preparing to bomb Nigeria’s capital
city of Abuja.
The threat comes as Nigeria opened another round of talks for the
release of more kidnapped schoolgirls.
The Nigerian military said in December that it had driven Boko Haram
from Sambisa Forest.
On Saturday, a statement by Brigadier General Sani Kukasheka Usman, an
army spokesman, confirmed that the man was among those freed in the
exchange, while calling the video “mere propaganda”.
“He was a direct beneficiary of the process that led to the release of
82 of the abducted girls, and does not have a say or capacity to do
anything, therefore his threats should be ignored,” the army said.
While the jihadists have lost significant swathes of territory since
Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari came to power in 2015, they are
still capable of launching deadly attacks on soldiers and continue to
unleash suicide bombers in cities and camps for internally displaced
people in Nigeria’s ravaged northeast.
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2017/05/boko-haram-video-of-purported-chibok-girl-worries-parents/
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2017/05/boko-haram-video-of-purported-chibok-girl-worries-parents/
The Boko Haram jihadist group has released a video claiming to show
Chibok schoolgirls who refused to be rescued as part of a recent swap
deal with the Nigerian government. In the three-minute video, a woman
who claims to be Maida Yakubu, one of the 276 schoolgirls kidnapped by
Boko Haram in April 2014, is seen wearing a black veil and holding a
gun. Flanked by three other women clad in black, she proclaims her
loyalty to Boko Haram, which has been fighting the government since 2009
in an insurgency that has killed over 20,000 people. When asked by a
man in the background why she does not want to return home to her
parents, she replies: “The reason is that they live in the town of
unbelief. We want them to accept Islam.” The woman then speaks in the
local Chibok dialect for the rest of the video. But the woman’s mother
believes she did so under duress. “For me, this video is torture,”
Esther Muntari told AFP on Saturday from Chibok. “I haven’t slept since I
watched it The tie that binds us is unbreakable. It’s just not possible
that my daughter prefers her kidnappers to me,” said the mother of
five.
Maida is the oldest at 19. Muntari said the woman mentioned Islam, she
“immediately understood that she had been forced to say what she said in
the video”. Last week, 82 schoolgirls who were kidnapped three years
ago were released in exchange for imprisoned Boko Haram members after
negotiations between the extremist group and the government. Presidency
spokesman Garba Shehu later disclosed that one girl had refused to
leave, saying she had married a Boko Haram fighter. Analysts said it was
likely that others may have developed sympathies for their captors over
time. “The video has instilled fear in our minds and has somewhat
dampened our hope that our girls will be freed,” Enoch Mark, whose two
children are missing, told AFP. “I don’t think any of our girls would
choose to stay with Boko Haram if they were given a choice,” Mark said.
“The only explanation” is that Maida was “forced to stay”. – ‘Complex
situation’ – Testimony from former hostages in the brutal conflict has
revealed that Boko Haram forced many women and young girls into
marriage, and that rape and sexual violence were commonplace. Some were
forced to work as domestic slaves for extremist fighters and even
deployed to the front line carrying ammunition during attacks. “From
what we know of other young women who’ve returned, the relationship with
their captors is very complex and at times quite ambiguous,” Elizabeth
Pearson, a Boko Haram specialist who studies women and conflict, told
AFP in an email exchange last week. Genuine relationships will emerge,
as not all fighters behave brutally to the women in the camps,
particularly if children are involved, she added. “It’s a much more
complex situation than the abducted-rescued-victim narrative we’ve seen
at times,” she said. The Islamist militants seized the Chibok girls in
April 2014, prompting global condemnation and drawing attention to the
bloody insurgency. Fifty-seven escaped in the immediate aftermath. Of
the 219 who did not manage to flee, 106 have either been released or
found, leaving 113 still missing.
The Boko Haram jihadist
group has released a video claiming to show Chibok schoolgirls who
refused to be rescued as part of a recent swap deal with the Nigerian
government.
In the three-minute video, a woman who claims to be Maida Yakubu, one of
the 276 schoolgirls kidnapped by Boko Haram in April 2014, is seen
wearing a black veil and holding a gun.
Flanked by three other women clad in black, she proclaims her loyalty to
Boko Haram, which has been fighting the government since 2009 in an
insurgency that has killed over 20,000 people.
When asked by a man in the background why she does not want to return
home to her parents, she replies: “The reason is that they live in the
town of unbelief. We want them to accept Islam.”
The woman then speaks in the local Chibok dialect for the rest of the
video.
But the woman’s mother believes she did so under duress.
“For me, this video is torture,” Esther Muntari told AFP on Saturday
from Chibok. “I haven’t slept since I watched it
The tie that binds us is unbreakable. It’s just not possible that my
daughter prefers her kidnappers to me,” said the mother of five. Maida
is the oldest at 19.
Muntari said the woman mentioned Islam, she “immediately understood that
she had been forced to say what she said in the video”.
Last week, 82 schoolgirls who were kidnapped three years ago were
released in exchange for imprisoned Boko Haram members after
negotiations between the extremist group and the government.
Presidency spokesman Garba Shehu later disclosed that one girl had
refused to leave, saying she had married a Boko Haram fighter.
Analysts said it was likely that others may have developed sympathies
for their captors over time.
“The video has instilled fear in our minds and has somewhat dampened our
hope that our girls will be freed,” Enoch Mark, whose two children are
missing, told AFP.
“I don’t think any of our girls would choose to stay with Boko Haram if
they were given a choice,” Mark said. “The only explanation” is that
Maida was “forced to stay”.
– ‘Complex situation’ –
Testimony from former hostages in the brutal conflict has revealed that
Boko Haram forced many women and young girls into marriage, and that
rape and sexual violence were commonplace.
Some were forced to work as domestic slaves for extremist fighters and
even deployed to the front line carrying ammunition during attacks.
“From what we know of other young women who’ve returned, the
relationship with their captors is very complex and at times quite
ambiguous,” Elizabeth Pearson, a Boko Haram specialist who studies women
and conflict, told AFP in an email exchange last week.
Genuine relationships will emerge, as not all fighters behave brutally
to the women in the camps, particularly if children are involved, she
added.
“It’s a much more complex situation than the abducted-rescued-victim
narrative we’ve seen at times,” she said.
The Islamist militants seized the Chibok girls in April 2014, prompting
global condemnation and drawing attention to the bloody insurgency.
Fifty-seven escaped in the immediate aftermath. Of the 219 who did not
manage to flee, 106 have either been released or found, leaving 113
still missing.
– ‘Mere propaganda’ –
Boko Haram also released a second video on Friday claiming to show five
commanders that the Nigerian government freed in exchange for the 82
Chibok girls.
In the video, a man who identifies himself as Abu Dardaa, or Money, says
Boko Haram has returned to Sambisa Forest, which was long its
stronghold in Borno State, and is preparing to bomb Nigeria’s capital
city of Abuja.
The threat comes as Nigeria opened another round of talks for the
release of more kidnapped schoolgirls.
The Nigerian military said in December that it had driven Boko Haram
from Sambisa Forest.
On Saturday, a statement by Brigadier General Sani Kukasheka Usman, an
army spokesman, confirmed that the man was among those freed in the
exchange, while calling the video “mere propaganda”.
“He was a direct beneficiary of the process that led to the release of
82 of the abducted girls, and does not have a say or capacity to do
anything, therefore his threats should be ignored,” the army said.
While the jihadists have lost significant swathes of territory since
Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari came to power in 2015, they are
still capable of launching deadly attacks on soldiers and continue to
unleash suicide bombers in cities and camps for internally displaced
people in Nigeria’s ravaged northeast.
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2017/05/boko-haram-video-of-purported-chibok-girl-worries-parents/
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2017/05/boko-haram-video-of-purported-chibok-girl-worries-parents/
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