The delay in freeing the over 200 girls seized from
Government Secondary School, Chibok, in Borno State, may have exposed them to
radicalisation by their captors, who are now using them for suicide bombings, a
source has said.
The source spoke about the possibility that the girls had been
indoctrinated by the terrorists in the last three months of their captivity,
hynotised and sent into various parts of Nigeria and beyond with a view to
carrying out deadly missions.
“It may shock you to know that some of
the girls being used for suicide bombings in parts of the North are among those
taken from Chibok in April this year,” the source said. Continuing, the source insisted that “it is
rather unfortunate that government wasted precious time in rescuing the girls
either through negotiation with Boko Haram or other means possible.
“It was clear from the outset that the girls
would not come out the same, after being kept with their unwanted hosts for a
long time”.
Although the Federal
Government said, last Wednesday, that the Chibok girls were not among the
female bombers, its spokesman did not provide any evidence to prove his
claim.
At a media briefing in Abuja,
Coordinator of the National Information Centre, Mr. Mike Omeri, tried to ward
off the suggestion that the 219 school girls currently in the captivity of Boko
Haram insurgents could have turned suicide bombers.
It will be recalled that few days after the
abduction of the girls, a human rights activist, who had taken part in failed bids to broker a
truce between the Federal Government and Boko Haram leadership, Shehu Sani, had raised the alarm that the
girls could be indoctrinated if not urgently freed.
Sani told Sunday Vanguard, in an exclusive
interview in May, that the prolonged detention of the girls by the terrorists
could dramatically alter their fate and orientation.
According to Sani, the longer the girls were
being kept by their captors, the higher
the potential of their being brainwashed to accept radicalism and
terrorism. He said:
”But the danger of
keeping these girls, without either using negotiation or force to free them is
that, everyday these girls are being brainwashed by the insurgents.
” If we are not careful, the Chibok girls
that would come out of captivity would not be the same girls that went into
captivity. They would be indoctrinated, they would be hypnotised and
brainwashed to the point that they would be transformed into insurgents
themselves. And of what use would they be?
“These are very young girls in their teens with very open and vulnerable
minds but open to dangerous ideas. You can see how a man would abduct a girl
whose parents don’t like him and, by the time the girl comes back she is ready
to fight her parents.
“So, the danger
is that as the clocks ticks, it is ticking for us , for the girls and for our
reputation and integrity as a country”.
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