Lagos, Nigeria -- Nigerians took to the
streets Thursday to demand the government do more to rescue scores of
girls abducted by militants more than two weeks ago.
Militants seized about
230 girls in the dead of the night at a high school in the nation's far
northeast, a hotbed for Islamist group Boko Haram.
Armed men herded the
girls out of bed and forced them into trucks on April 16 in the town of
Chibok. The convoy of trucks then disappeared into the dense forest
bordering Cameroon.
Roughly 200 girls are still missing, although the authorities and parents differ on the number.
Nigerians have rallied
for days to criticize the government's handling of the rescue efforts.
Hundreds wept and chanted "bring back our girls" during protests in the
capital of Abuja on Wednesday. A day later, protesters gathered in
Lagos.
Shortly after the abductions last month, frustrated Chibok residents went into the forest in motorbikes to search for the girls.
During their nine-hour
trek, they never saw a single soldier in the forest where authorities
believe the militants took the girls, said Enoch Mark, whose daughter
and two nieces were among the kidnapped.
"A total of 230 parents
registered the names of their daughters who were missing on the day of
the kidnap," said Asabe Kwambura, principal of the Government Girls
Secondary School. "From my records, 43 girls have so far escaped on
their own from their kidnappers. We still have 187 girls missing."
Angry relatives
In Chibok, angry parents accused authorities of playing politics with the lives of their children.
Witnesses have seen
militants in dozens of vehicles headed to nearby Cameroon, said Ayuba
Alamson, whose two nieces were among the kidnapped.
In a statement Thursday, Nigeria's Defense Ministry said it's committed to the search.
"A lot of information
has been received in the efforts at securing the freedom of the girls.
The armed forces assures all Nigerians that it will continue to appraise
every information received during this operation accordingly," it said.
.
"While it will not
relent in its efforts in this search, the armed forces is mindful of the
fact that some of the information with which it has been inundated are
actually a ploy to distract it from its goal of dealing with terrorism
and other violent crimes aimed at crippling the nation."
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