Freed Chibok Schoolgirls Meet Nigeria’s President
Chibok girls happy to ‘be back’ but talk of captivity
By Michael Ireland, Senior Corresondent, ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)
ABUJA, NIGERIA
(ANS, Oct. 24, 2016) -- The 21 girls released by Boko Haram Oct. 13
have met President Buhari to thank him personally for his part in their
release, according to World Watch Monitor (www.worldwatchmonitor.org).
Addressing
a crowd at the presidential villa, one of the girls, Rebecca Mallum,
burst into song. She later said: “We are happy to see this wonderful day
because we didn’t know we would come back to be members of Nigeria. Let
us thank God for his love.”
World
Watch Monitor said that speaking to CNN, some of the girls said they
plan to return to school – Boko Haram translates in the local Hausa
language as ‘Western education is a sin.’
CNN
reported that a parent who wished to remain anonymous said on their
release last week one girl revealed more about life in captivity. The
parent said that one of the girls had refused to marry a Boko Haram
fighter and was told she would be killed. In the end she was given 100
lashes.
The girls have been undergoing intense psychological evaluations at a medical facility in the capital, Abuja.
CNN
said it's hard to imagine that the girls, now giggling and chatting
among themselves, were at the mercy of one of the world's deadliest
terrorist organizations just one week ago.
CNN said as the Chibok girls waited patiently Wednesday to meet the man who signed off on their release
-- Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari -- it was remarkable to see the
physical transformation from emaciated and haggard looking former
hostages to seemingly carefree and happy young women.
CNN
said the faded and torn clothes they arrived in have since been
replaced with tailored and brightly colored fabrics that concealed their
still painfully-thin frames.
In
their first interactions with any media organization, CNN's Isha Sesay
met most of the 21 girls at the meeting held at the presidential villa.
CNN
stated: “They posed for photos and politely, but shyly, answered
questions about their well-being. Although in their early 20s, the
Chibok girls appear trapped in their schoolgirl personas, their
development seemingly arrested by two and a half years in captivity.”
The
Chibok girls met Nigerian President Buhari at the presidential villa in
Abuja, Nigeria’s capital. One of them, Rebecca Mallum, was chosen to
thank the President and address the crowd. As she rose, Mallum burst
into song and the other girls stood to join her.
Afterward,
the young woman said: "We are happy to see this wonderful day because
we didn't know we would come back to be members of Nigeria. Let us thank
God for his love. Let us pray for the rest in the Sambisa now. Let God
help us to be together."
CNN
said, however, that underneath the quiet and withdrawn smiles of the
Chibok girls lies the unimaginable horrors of their time in captivity.
Boko
Haram kidnapped 276 girls and women, ages 16 to 18, in the middle of
the night at a boarding school in Chibok, Nigeria, in April 2014,
drawing global outrage. Scores of the girls remain missing.
CNN
has spoken to a parent who said their daughter has revealed some of the
ordeal that she and her classmates went through. The parent, who asked
not to be named because of safety concerns, told CNN that during their
time with Boko Haram, the girls were forced to build their own basic
shelter, using plastic bags for roofing.
According
to the parent, one of the Chibok schoolgirls had refused to marry a
Boko Haram fighters and was told she would be killed. In the end, she
was given 100 lashes, the daughter said.
On
the day of release last week, the parent was told by their daughter
that Boko Haram lined up the girls early in the morning and read out
their names one by one, they were then told they would be set free.
CNN
said the Chibok girls now face a long road to recovery. Some have
expressed a desire to return to school but for the time being, they
remain in a medical facility in the capital Abuja where they are
undergoing intense psychological evaluations.
The
Nigerian government says it is now time for them to experience the best
of what life has to offer. Buhari promised to take over responsibility
for their welfare and personal and professional goals.
He
said: "These dear daughters of ours have seen the worst that the world
has to offer. It is now time for them to experience the best that the
world can do for them."
Photo
captions: 1) Freed schoolgirls meet with President Buhari in Abuja. 2)
Joy and tears as schoolgirls are reunited with parents. 3) Michael
Ireland.
About
the Writer: Michael Ireland is a volunteer internet journalist serving
as Senior Correspondent for the ASSIST News Service, as well as an
Ordained Minister who has served with ASSIST Ministries and written for
ASSIST News Service since its beginning in 1989. He has reported for ANS
from Jamaica, Mexico, Nicaragua, Israel, Jordan, China, and Russia.
Please consider helping Michael cover his expenses in bringing news of
the Persecuted Church, by logging-on to: https://actintl.givingfuel.com/ireland-michael
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