(MAIDUGURI,
Nigeria) — About 50 young women remained missing Wednesday after Boko
Haram extremists attacked a village in northern Nigeria that is home to a
boarding school for girls, provoking fears that they may have met the
same fate as those kidnapped from the town of Chibok nearly four years
ago.
Abdullahi
Bego, a spokesman for the governor in Yobe state, said that authorities
had no credible information that those missing from the village of
Dapchi were taken by Boko Haram. Some witnesses, however, recalled
seeing young girls being taken by the armed militants who also abducted
276 girls from the school in Chibok in April 2014.
“I
share the anguish of all the parents and guardians of the girls that
remain unaccounted for,” Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari tweeted
Wednesday evening. “I would like to assure them that we are doing all in
our power to ensure the safe return of all the girls.”
Armed
Boko Haram fighters invaded Dapchi on Monday evening, forcing
residents, including students of Government Girls Secondary school, to
flee into the bushes.
Police and the state ministry of education had initially denied claims that students were abducted.
SOURCE: YAHOO NEWS
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