The father of one of the released Chibok Girls has said that his daughter, Deborah Jafaru, who came back with a child, was pregnant before her abduction.
He spoke during the Thanksgiving service organised for the girls on Sunday in Abuja.
“Unlike the others, Deborah had already finished her secondary school; she did not make her papers and returned to rewrite her WASSCE when she was taken.
She just got married two weeks before returning for her papers and they took her, her husband has remarried now. They abducted her with pregnancy and she had my grandchild there but I’m just grateful to God and the government for returning my daughter and grandchild to me safely. Words cannot describe how I feel at the moment,” he said.
The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed,
during the thanksgiving, said that the release of the girls “is only a
first step in what we believe will be a total liberation of all the
girls’’.
He said negotiation was on-going for the release of the others in captivity.
“This is just the beginning and we are
very optimistic that another batch, bigger than this will be released to
us soon. Negotiation is on-going even as we speak now but it is only
those who ought to know that know the details. All we can do is to
support them with prayers so that in a very short time we are going to
have a bigger reunion than this,’’ he said.
The minister cautioned “naysayers’’ who
doubted the process and some social commentators to refrain from making
comments that could jeopardise the process.
“We want to sound a note of warning, particularly to many reckless analysts and commentators who are not helping the situation. We still have more than 120 of our children in captivity, therefore we must be careful of the kind of comments we make.We must not make comments that will make the release of other girls difficult or impossible. We should know that these are very delicate situations. There are some promises we made also about the confidentiality of the entire process and we intend to keep them,’’ he said.
The minister specifically frowned at the
comments of some people, who were claiming credit for the release of
the 21 girls and speculating specific period for the release of others.
He said the event, which witnessed the reunited of the girls with their parents, was a day the entire world had been expecting.
“Many doubted the ability of government that this day will come but they have been proved wrong. When President Muhammadu Buhari
said that the Boko Haram saga will not be closed until all the abducted
girls have been released to their families sadly many doubted us but we
thank God for today. We can all see the joy and emotion of the parents
and this is ample proof that the girls that were released were indeed
those that were abducted,’’ he added.
The minister reiterated that the girls
were not swapped for Boko Haram members in captivity and that government
did not pay ransom for their release.
He said it was unparalleled in the
history of kidnapping and terrorism what the government had done;
securing the release of the girls safely without any ransom or swap.
On her part, the Minister of Women Affairs, Hajia Jummai Alhassan said she was excited and happy to see the girls reunited with their parents.
“You can see the joy of the parents who
arrived this morning. They arrived in Abuja at about 2a.m. and it took
me a lot of persuasion to keep them to rest till now before bringing
them to the children. As my colleague had said, this is just the
beginning; the others, by the grace of God, will be released safely
soon. I am also happy that from the interim reports we are getting, the
girls are well and okay,’’ she said.
The minister reiterated the earlier promise by Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo that government would take care of the education of the girls.
Photo Credit: The Nation
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