Thursday, 8 May 2014

Former BH Negotiator Says The Group Plan To Exchange The 300 Kidnapped Schoolgirls For Prisoner Trade

A grab taken from a video obtained by French news agency AFP which shows the leader of Islamist group Boko Haram, Abubakar Shekau (centre), vowing to sell hundreds of captured schoolgirls as sex slaves
Following the video footage that was released ,a  former mediator of the group Shehu Sani has told the Telegraph he believes the video, where Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau threatens to sell the girls as slaves, shows he plans to use them as ‘bargaining chips’ rather than kill them.
Nearly 300 schoolgirls kidnapped in Nigeria by Islamist militants could be released in exchange for jailed comrades, a former Boko Haram negotiator has reportedly said. The group snatched the girls from their boarding school in Chibok in the lawless Borno region in the north of the country.
Shehu Sani says he believes that the footage, released on Monday, was an attempt to persuade the Nigerian government into a prisoner trade. He told the newspaper:


‘From my knowledge of the group, to have him saying that he will sell them is proof that this issue can be resolved. ‘The group is most likely to want to attach some kind of conditions to the girls being released, such as the freeing of some of their own prisoners.’

In the video, the Boko Haram leader is seen dressed in combat fatigues standing in front of an armoured personnel carrier and two pick-up trucks mounted with sub-machine guns. He then declares:

 'I abducted your girls. I will sell them in the market, by Allah.' Shekau then takes a swipe at democracy, Western education, efforts for Muslims and Christians to live in peace and rails against non-believers in Islam.
Yesterday, the group also slaughtered hundreds of people after storming a town in the north of the country. Militants are said to have gunned down groups of unarmed civilians and set fire to a number of buildings, including a police station, during the rampage in Borno State.

And on Tuesday, 11 more girls were kidnapped from the village of Warabe, increasing the international pressure for the extremist group to be stopped and the girls returned. Nigerian Police are now offering a N50m reward to anyone who can help them find the missing children.

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