There were indications yesterday that the 230 female students abducted
by Boko Haram terrorists from the Government Girls’ Secondary School,
GGSS, Chibok, Borno State, have been sited at the Sambisa Forest in
Borno State, by the Special Forces of the United States Marines.
The
girls who were abducted on April 14, were part of the 250 students
boarded at the school for the West African School Certificate, WASC/
Senior Secondary School Certificate, SSSC, examinations, triggering
world-wide condemnations.
This was even as more US military
officials arrived Nigeria yesterday to join local officials in the
search for nearly 300 school girls taken captives by the Islamist
extremist group, Boko Haram, the US Secretary of State John Kerry, and
the defence department, Pentagon, said.
The UK team had earlier
arrived in Abuja to support Nigerian government in its response to the
abduction of over 200 school girls.
The arrival of the foreign
troops is coming on the heels of the appeal yesterday by the former Vice
President, Atiku Abubakar for Nigerians to unite and fight the
insurgents to achieve success.
The abduction of the school girls
on April 14 in a remote community in Borno State, one of the most
shocking terrorist acts by Boko Haram yet, has drawn widespread anger
around the world with calls for a swift action.
President Goodluck Jonathan said Thursday that the kidnapping will be “the beginning of end” of Boko Haram.
US
President Obama has said he hopes the abduction by Boko Haram will
galvanize the international community to act against the brutal group
that has directed much of its cruelty on civilians and the innocent.
This
week, more than 100 people were killed in a busy market by militants
suspected to be from the group. The attack occurred in Gamboru Ngala,
Borno State, near the Nigerian border with Cameroun.
Besides the
United States, Britain, France and China have also offered to help
rescue the stolen girls. Obama said the team sent to Nigeria comprised
personnel from military, law enforcement and other agencies.
France said it will station 3,000 troops in Nigeria’s neighbouring countries to help fight militants in the Sahel region.
British
satellites and advanced tracking capabilities also will be used, and
China has promised to provide any intelligence gathered by its satellite
network.
Meanwhile in a statement yesterday, the Foreign and
Commonwealth Office spokesperson said, “a team of UK experts who will
advise and support the Nigerian authorities in its response to the
abduction of over 200 school girls touched down in Abuja, Nigeria this
morning”.
The team is drawn from across government, including
DfID, FCO and the MoD, and will work with the Nigerian authorities
leading on the abductions and terrorism in Nigeria. The team will be
considering not just the recent incidents but also longer-term
counter-terrorism solutions to prevent such attacks in the future and
defeat Boko Haram.
The team will be working closely with their US counterparts and others to coordinate efforts.
US Marines find abducted girls, arrest a Boko Haram leader
The
sources told Saturday Vanguard in Abuja that members of the United
States Marines who are already in Maiduguri following the promise by
President Barak Obama to assist Nigeria in rescuing the abducted girls,
located the girls inside the forest, using some Satellite equipment
which combed the forest, located an assembly of the young girls and sent
the images back to the Marines on ground in Maiduguri.
Aside
locating the whereabouts of the girls in the dense forest, it was also,
further gathered that one of the leaders of terrorist group who
participated in the abduction of the girls was arrested by a combined
team of the US Marines and Nigerian forces.
Sources said that the
Boko Haram leader was arrested, through an advanced interceptor
equipment which was used to track the terrorist while exchanging
information with his colleagues in Sambisa Forest about the movements of
American and Nigerian soldiers in Maiduguri.
His phone was subsequently traced to a location in Maiduguri where he was arrested and handed over to the Nigerian military.
The
location of the girls in the forest is contrary to widespread reports
that the girls had been distributed and ferried to the Nigerian border
towns in Chad, Cameroon and Niger Republic.
Senator Ahmed Zanna,
representing Borno Central District in whose Maiduguri home, an alleged
Boko Haram top commander was once arrested told the Senate last week
that he gave the Military an up-to-date information on how the girls
could be rescued, but lamented that his information was largely ignored.
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