Boko Haram extremists Sunday released a video (see below) claiming some of the abducted Chibok schoolgirls have been killed in air strikes by Nigerian military.
One of the alleged victims is seen pleading with the Federal Government to release detained militants so the girls can be freed.
The video posted Sunday on YouTube shows a girl in hijab, identified as one of the students abducted from Chibok, Borno State in April 2014, claiming that some of her kidnapped classmates died in aerial bombardments by the military. She also said that 40 have been “married” to Islamic extremist fighters.
The video shows a masked gunman warning in the Hausa language that if President Muhammadu Buhari’s government battles Boko Haram with firepower, the girls won’t be seen again.
“Presently, some of the girls are crippled, some are terribly sick and some of them, as I had said, died during bombardment by the Nigerian military,” the fighter says, appearing before a group of more than 40 young women in headscarves and hijabs.
“If our members in detention are not freed, let the government and parents of the Chibok girls know that they will never find these girls again.”
It says the Chibok girls are held by Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau, who is in a leadership battle with a lieutenant named by the Islamic State group as the new leader of what it calls its West Africa Province.
In the video, the fighter says the Nigerian government has repeatedly lied to its citizens with promises to quickly free those kidnapped from Chibok Government Girls School, who now are all over 18 years old.
The young woman in the video, probably speaking under duress, begs for help to free them.
“Oh you, my people and our parents, you just have to please come to our rescue: We are suffering here, the aircraft has come to bombard us and killed many of us. Some are wounded. Every day we are in pains and suffering, so are our babies. Some of our husbands that we married also are injured, some dead. No one cares for us.
“Please go and beg the government of Nigeria to release the members of our abductors so that they too can free us to let us come home. We are really suffering, there is no food to eat, no good water to drink here.”