Over
250 schoolgirls were kidnapped from their dormitory in April 2014 and at
least 219 of them are still believed to be in captivity, although there
is yet no clue on their location.
But
Salkida, in an op-ed for TheCable.ng, suggested that President
Muhammadu Buhari should use state machinery to open up access to the
militants rather than say he has no clue on the kidnapped girls whose
abductions sparked off the #BringBackOurGirls campaign.
Salkida wrote:
“Most of the Chibok girls, whether they are split into groups or not, are alive, multiple credible sources have told me, and if a deal to release them will weaken national security and endanger the entire country, then the federal government shouldn’t make a deal.
I am confident that Chibok girls and other captives can return to their families if the government is half as strong-willed as some of the girls in captivity that have refused to be married out or give up their faith.
The girls would have never backed out of any process, no matter how irritating it is. They would stay on and negotiate hard until they get a deal that will earn them their freedom and stop such abductions so that no one else can ever witness their woeful plight.”
Boko Haram leader, Abubakar Shekau – from whom nothing has been heard
in the last 10 months — once released a video of the schoolgirls and
said he had sold them off to marriage. All efforts to free the girls
have failed.
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