Daily Trust
exclusively reports that most of the 234 Borno schoolgirls in Boko Haram
captivity have been ferried abroad to Chad and Cameroon after they were married
off to sect members on N2,000 bride price each, an elder revealed yesterday.
Dr. Pogu,
who is the leader of the Chibok Elders Forum, said yesterday that latest
information available to them indicates that most of the girls have been taken
to the neighboring Cameroon and Chad by their captors.
“They ferried them in canoes to Cameroon and
Chad republic after they were wedded off to Boko Haram members who bidded (sic)
and paid N2,000 each as dowries on their heads,”
“The dowry was paid to
their captors, the very people who abducted them from their school. One of them
who married one of the girls took her to a border town close to Cameroon where
villagers saw her.”
Following their abduction, the schoolgirls were thought to
be first taken to the Boko Haram camps in the notorious Sambisa Forest. Reports later said villagers had seen the girls
being conveyed in trucks to other locations.
“So many sources have
informed us that the girls have been taken to Cameroon. Many villagers said
they saw the girls being transported in trucks and then in canoes.
“On Sunday they were
taken to Dikwa area where they (Boko Haram) have a camp there. From there they
took them to Marte, then Monguno before they were finally ferried in canoes. It
was yesterday we got this latest report of them being married off to the insurgents
by their captors.”
He said sources in Cameroon told them that most of the girls
were now being held at “an area where the
Boko Haram operates in Cameroon.”
On whether military authorities were informed about the
movements of the girls, he said: “The
military was alerted on Tuesday about two weeks ago when some villagers saw
many of the girls being transported in trucks, some with even their school
uniforms. The villagers tried calling the senator representing the zone but
they couldn’t get him so they went to Bama barracks where they reported the
matter.
“At the Bama barracks
they were told that they must put it in writing, that that is the military
tradition. At that time if the military had intervened they would have stopped
them from reaching their destination. “And the fact that for nearly two weeks
we have been talking about this and nothing is being done, then there are
questions we have to ask. Nobody did anything.”
“What is happening with the Nigerian nation? I
think we demand some answers. Today it is happening to these unfortunate girls
from Chibok, tomorrow it may be somewhere else and that is why all Nigerians
must rally around us on this,” he said.
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