A woman has told the BBC that the Chibok girls abducted by
militant Islamists in Nigeria last year were seen alive three weeks ago. She
said that she saw the girls in the north-eastern Gwoza town before the Boko
Haram militants were driven out of there by regional forces.
Boko Haram sparked global outrage when it seized more than
219 girls from Chibok town a year ago.
The US, China and other foreign powers promised to help find
the girls.
The Nigerian woman, who lived under Boko Haram’s rule in
Gwoza, told the BBC she saw the girls
“They said they
were Chibok girls kept in a big house,” said the woman, who asked not to be
identified for fear of reprisals.
“We just happened
to be on the same road with them,” she added.
Another woman told the BBC she last saw some of the girls in
November at a Boko Haram camp in Bita village, also in the north-east.
“About a week
after they were brought to the camp, one of us peeked through a window and
asked: ‘Are you really the Chibok girls?’ and they said: ‘Yes’. We believed
them and didn’t ask them again,” the woman said.
“They took Koranic
lessons, cleaned their compound, cooked for themselves and they braided each
others’ hair. They were treated differently – their food [was] better and water
clean. “
Boko Haram was believed to have turned Gwoza into its
headquarters after it captured the town in August 2014. Nigeria’s military,
backed by troops from neighbouring countries, recaptured the town last month.
The militants were suspected to have fled to the nearby
Mandara Mountains, near the border with Cameroon. It is unclear whether the
girls are with them there.
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