Britain and the United States of America have joined the search for the
234 schoolgirls abducted from Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok,
Borno, by the Boko Haram sect.
The girls were kidnapped in their hostel
on April 14 after members of the sect, pretending to be soldiers, lured
the pupils away from their hostel before setting it ablaze.
About 30 of the girls escaped from
captivity while about a dozen, who fled into the bush when the sect
attacked the school, have since returned to the school.
The military had initially claimed that
it had rescued all but 18 of the girls but the school principal, Asabe
Kwabura, debunked the statement.
Parents who tried to rescue their
children from the Sambisa Forest where the pupils are reportedly being
kept by Boko Haram had to turn back when they learnt that the sect was
heavily armed and that they might lose their lives in the process.
An enlarged Security Council meeting
presided over by President Goodluck Jonathan on Thursday directed the
military to do everything possible to rescue the schoolgirls.
On Friday, British Foreign Secretary, William Hague, said his country had begun talks with Nigeria over the incident.
He stated this in a response made
available to our correspondent by the spokesperson of the British High
Commission in Abuja, Mr. Robert Fitzpatrick.
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