Nigerian troops find kidnapped Chibok schoolgirl with baby
MAIDUGURI, Nigeria (AP) - Nigerian troops rescued one of the Chibok schoolgirls kidnapped by Boko Haram extremists more than two years ago in a pre-dawn raid Saturday on a forest hideout. She had a 10-month-old baby boy born to a Boko Haram fighter, said a statement from army spokesman Col. Sani Kukasheka Usman.
It was the first army rescue of a
Chibok girl.
Last month, Nigeria's government
secured the freedom of 21 of the Chibok schoolgirls in the first such release
negotiated with Boko Haram. Another girl escaped in May on her own.
Thousands of other Boko Haram captives
have been freed this year as the military has forced the extremists out of
towns and villages in northeastern Nigeria, where they had declared an Islamic
caliphate. But until Saturday, none proved to be among the 276 schoolgirls
seized from northeastern Chibok town in April 2014. Dozens of them escaped
within hours.
President Muhammadu Buhari has vowed to
secure the release of the nearly 200 schoolgirls who remain captive.
The failures of successive governments
and security forces to free the girls brought international condemnation and
the creation of a movement called Bring Back Our Girls. U.S. first lady
Michelle Obama posted a picture of herself under that hashtag and vowed her
husband would do everything in his power to help bring the girls home.
Former President Goodluck Jonathan's
initial refusal even to admit the girls had been taken hostage, losing precious
days after their capture, contributed to his loss at 2015 elections.
Meanwhile, activists and relatives have
objected to the government's prolonged holding of Amina Ali Nkeki, the girl who
escaped in May. She says she wants to be reunited with her mother and the
father of her child, a detained Boko Haram extremist whom she says also was a
victim of kidnapping and helped her escape.
The government says she is receiving
trauma counseling and other care at a military hospital in Abuja, where she has
been joined by the girls released last month.
Human rights activists have protested
against the prolonged military screening of escapees from Boko Haram that has
kept thousands held in detention, where Amnesty International has reported
babies are among those dying from inhumane conditions.
Some 20,000 people have been killed in
Boko Haram's seven-year Islamic uprising that has spread across borders and
forced 2.6 million refugees from their homes.
Faul reported from Lagos.

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