After Nigeria’s military reported rescuing a second “Chibok girl” in a forest battle with Islamic extremists, a community leader said Friday she is not on the list of 218 students who were abducted from a school in 2014 by Boko Haram.
Army spokesman Col. Sani Kukasheka Usman said soldiers freed the girl after a Thursday night battle in the northeastern Sambisa Forest in which it liberated 97 women and children and killed 35 extremists. He said she is No. 157 on the list of the 218 girls who were seized more than two years ago from a boarding school in Chibok.
Serah Luke, a kidnapped and rescued Chibok schoolgirl | Nigerian Army Photo |
But No. 157 has a different name, Chibok community leader Pogu Bitrus told The Associated Press. The list has two other young women sharing the surname given by the military, and the rescued girl may have been visiting older sisters at the school the night of the kidnapping, said Bitrus.
The first Chibok teenager to be freed with a 4-month-old baby and was discovered by hunters wandering on the fringes of the Sambisa Forest on Tuesday. On Thursday, Amina Ali Nkeki, 19, was flown to Abuja to meet with Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari.
Parents of the kidnapped girls, the Bring Back Our Girls movement and aid workers all have criticized the Nigerian government and military for their handling of the development, with Refugees International charging her escape is being politicized and that she should not be paraded in public but getting urgent medical care for sexual abuse and psychosocial counseling.
Ali has revealed that a few of the girls died in captivity but most remain under heavy guard in the forest, according to family doctor Idriss Danladi. The AP does not identify suspected victims of sexual assault but named Ali after she appeared on TV alongside the president.
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