On Tuesday there was the widespread trend online that the Chibok girls, abducted 162 days ago, had
been released.
The excitement of
Nigerians was, however, cut short as the
Defence Headquarters refuted the story earlier attributed to them by online
media, including the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC).
The Defence headquarters, on its Twitter handle, stated that
“the story circulating in respect of release of the Chibok girls is untrue.
Buses drove into the barracks but conveyed other individuals.”
Army spokesman, Major-General Chris Olukolade, told the BBC
there were girls in military custody, but not those from Chibok as originally
thought.
Earlier, Olukolade had told the BBC that there was an
ongoing exercise to release the schoolgirls taken from Chibok and that some of
them were safe in a military barracks.
But he later called back to retract his statement, saying
the authorities were trying to confirm the identities of the girls in custody of the army, but they did not come
from Chibok.
In recent days, there have been unconfirmed reports that the
Nigerian government has been negotiating a deal with Boko Haram to exchange the
abducted girls for imprisoned Islamist fighters.
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