The Boko
Haram group has today released four of the over 234 schoolgirls kidnapped
from the Government Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State, an official has
said.
The Chairman
of Chibok Local Government Area, Bana Lawan, said on Wednesday that the four
girls were released by their captors on Tuesday after they fell ill; thus
bringing to 57 the number of girls accounted for.
Mr. Lawan
spoke in Abuja at a one-day stakeholders meeting for validation of draft
humanitarian response plan for the abducted girls.
According to Premium Times,The meeting
was organised by the National Emergency Management Agency, NEMA.
Represented
by the council’s Director of Personnel and Management, Musa Kolo, the chairman
commended Nigerians for showing concern and support for Chibok people, saying
the support restored the hope and aspiration of the people for the return of
peace to the community.
He commended
the Federal Government’s prompt intervention through the provision of relief
items for the people.
He urged the
Federal Government to resuscitate the facilities destroyed by the insurgents
and improve security in the affected school to boost the morale of the
students.
Mr. Lawan
explained that boys were encouraged to attend the school in Chibok because of
the lack of education facilities in the area and appealed for the construction
of boys’ hostels in the school.
He said the
construction of the hostels would reduce the hardship faced by the students,
who attended school from afar.
Mr. Lawan,
who also decried the poor health facilities in the area, appealed for the
deployment of medical personnel and teachers to the area.
He said the
deployment of National Youth Service Corps members to the area would boost the
educational and health needs of the people of Chibok.
Earlier, the
NEMA Director-General, Mohammad Sani-Sidi, said the meeting was aimed at
strengthening the coordination mechanism for humanitarian response in Chibok.
“While the
Federal Government is working towards the safe release of the abducted girls,
it is important that a sectoral response plan is prepared for their
rehabilitation and reintegration back to normal life.
“The
objective of the meeting is to integrate all sectoral response plans into one
holistic multi-sectoral response plan to avoid duplication of efforts,’’ Mr.
Sani-Sidi said.
He said NEMA
and other actors had intervened in crisis occasioned by insurgency in Chibok by
providing food and other items, water and medicaments for the affected people.
Also the UN
Resident Coordinator in Nigeria, Dauda Toure, said the organisation had mapped
out a 75 million-dollar intervention plan for states affected by the state of
emergency in the north-east.
He said the
UN system in Nigeria has developed an integrated response package to address
the humanitarian needs in Chibok.
He said the
UN system would intervene in the areas of health, peace and conflict
resolution, water and sanitation, among others.
April 14
marks a watershed in the attacks carried out by members of Islamic
fundamentalist sect, Boko Haram, as they kidnapped over 250 girls from their
secondary school in Borno State, and threatened to sell them if the federal
government refuses to exchange them for terrorists in prisons.
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