Police claim release of one kidnapped Chibok schoolgirl
National police spokesman Emmanuel Ojokwu said the girl was
"dropped off by suspected Boko Haram militants at Mubi in Adamawa
state" at about 5:00 p.m., on Wednesday.
"The information we have is that she is one of the
abducted girls. Other details will be made known to you in due course," he
said, adding the girl was aged 20 and receiving medical treatment.
But Enoch Mark, an elder from the kidnapped schoolgirls'
hometown of Chibok in northeast Borno state, told AFP that the name the girl
gave was not among the 219 missing.
"Her name is not on the list so we don't know,"
said Mark, who had seen the girl in the Adamawa state capital, Yola.
"She's in trauma. She couldn't speak. We picked her up
in the bush. We suspected that she was one of the abducted girls. But she's not
from Chibok. The police officer made a mistake."
Mark suggested that the girl was local to Mubi and had now
been handed over to military personnel in Yola.
The mass abduction in Chibok triggered global condemnation
and a social media campaign that forced the Nigerian government into accepting
foreign help to locate their whereabouts.
Nearly six months on and despite the country's military
claiming that they had located the girls, they are still being held captive.
Talks between the government and the militants about a
possible prisoner swap for the hostages have stalled.
Hopes were raised on Tuesday when the military in Abuja initially confirmed
reports that 37 of the missing girls had been released, only to retract its
statement moments later.
Mark, whose own daughter is among the captives, two other
Chibok elders and a Borno state government official said at the time that
although the 37 were from the town, they were not from those still missing.
Instead, they were being taken under military escort to Kaduna state to continue
their schooling.
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