Nigeria rejects Boko Haram prisoner swap for hostage girls
Nigeria today rejected conditions
set out by Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau for the release of more than 200
schoolgirls held hostage by the Islamists.
Asked if the government would reject
the suggestion by Shekau in a new video that the girls may be released once
Nigeria frees all militant prisoners, Interior Minister Abba Moro told AFP: “Of
course.”
“The issue in question is not about
Boko Haram... giving conditions,” he said.
Shekau made the claim in a video
obtained by AFP today claiming to show about 130 of the 276 girls abducted from
their school in the remote northeastern town of Chibok, in Borno state, on
April 14.
“We will never release them (the
girls) until after you release our brethren,” he said.
The militant leader, who has made
prisoner exchange demands before, said that some of the teenagers had converted
from Christianity to Islam.
The International Crisis Group said
in a report published last month that Boko Haram had written an open letter in
2011 to the governor of northern Kano state, demanding the release of
detainees.
Shekau repeated the demand in a
video released last week claiming responsibility for the mass kidnapping that
has sparked global condemnation and calls for action.
Nigeria’s military has been accused
of rounding up thousands of Boko Haram suspects, including women and children,
and holding them in atrocious conditions that have been criticised by rights
groups.
On March 14, Boko Haram fighters
stormed the notorious Giwa military barracks in the state capital of Borno,
Maiduguri, freeing hundreds of militants.
Amnesty International, however, said on March 31
that there was “credible evidence” that more than 600 people, most of them
unarmed recaptured detainees, were summarily killed in the military
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