President Buhari and the Chibok girls
The Federal Government, on Thursday, said some of the schoolgirls
released by Boko Haram militants over the weekend would need surgery for
various ailments, The Punch reports.
The Minister of Women Affairs and Social Development, Hajiya Jummai
Alhassan, who said this at a press conference in Abuja, stated that the
girls were undergoing treatment that would take a few weeks to
complete.
No fewer than 276 schoolgirls were abducted over three years ago,
while 82 were released after negotiations involving the Swiss
Government, the International Committee of the Red Cross and the Federal
Government on one side and the terror sect on the other.
Twenty-one of the girls were released in October 2016, but had yet to be reunited with their parents.
The minister said results of the medical tests so far conducted on
the 82 Chibok girls, who were kidnapped from the Government Secondary
School, Chibok, Borno State, in April 2014, had shown that some of the
youngsters needed to be operated upon.
She stated that the medical screening, being carried out on the girls, would be completed between two and three weeks.
“The 82 Chibok girls are currently undergoing medical screening
in Abuja. Some of them need surgery; this should be completed in two to
three weeks,” she said.
Alhassan stated that before the arrival of the 82 girls, the
Federal Government had been taking care of the 21 previously released
girls and four babies.
She added that the 21 girls came back in bad shape and spent almost
two months under medical care and were handed over to her on December
22, 2016.
The women affairs minister explained that the parents of the 21
girls were reunited with their daughters within one week of their return
in October 2016.
“Upon return, all the 21 Chibok girls said they wanted to go
back to school, but that they didn’t want to go to school in Chibok,” she said.
According to her, the girls travelled to Chibok for Christmas in
December 2016 as soon as they emerged from medical care and spent two
weeks there.
She said although they were scheduled to travel to Chibok again for
Easter, security situation at that time was not conducive enough, so
their parents were invited to Abuja.
Alhassan disclosed that it was the choice of the Chibok girls and
their parents to stay under the care of the Federal Government in Abuja.
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