Chibok schoolgirls possibly hidden in bunkers: Borno elder

Chibok girls

Kidnapped Chibok schoolgirls

Kidnapped Chibok schoolgirls
Kidnapped Chibok schoolgirls

Four hundred days after Boko haram gunmen kidnapped 219 schoolgirls from Chibok in Borno state, a theory is being suggested that the insurgents may be hiding them in bunkers in the vast forest of Sambisa.

In recent weeks, the resurgent Nigerian military has rescued over a thousand women from Boko Haram captivity, with none of the Chibok girls being among them.

Where could they be?

The Secretary of Borno Elders Forum, Dr Gubio Bulama, on Tuesday said there was general suspicion that Boko Haram insurgents were hiding them in bunkers in Sambisa forest.

Bulama stated this while presenting a paper at a Post-2015 Election Conference organised by the Savanah Centre for Diplomacy, Democracy and Democracy in Abuja.

He said that the genuine fear in Borno was that the insurgents had built bunkers in the vast forest, where they may be hiding the girls.

He urged the military to view that possibility with seriousness in its ongoing assault on the insurgents in that enclave.

He said, “the genuine fear which needs to be viewed seriously is whether bunkers might have been built within the vast forest.

“It should not be forgotten that at the initial stage, the insurgents were able to build bunkers large enough to accommodate up to 500 people right inside Maiduguri, at Bulabulin Ngarannan Ward.

“If they were able to do that in Maiduguri, when they find themselves in the forest without any disturbance, they can build bunkers and this is our genuine fear.

“We are calling on the military to look into the possibility of the Boko Haram having serious bunkers, and we are even suspecting that the Chibok girls are living in bunkers.”

Related News

No fewer than 219 girls were abducted from the Government Girls’ Secondary School in Chibok, Borno, on April 14, 2014, now 400 days ago.

The military had confirmed that none of the girls was among the hundreds of female hostages recently rescued from Boko Haram’s stronghold in the past few weeks.

Bulama said it was unfortunate that the insurgents were allowed to occupy the forest for a long time, which provided them the opportunity to study and master its entire terrain.

He added that the terrorists were also known to have dug tunnels to enable them move from house to house.

“So, having been left unchallenged for such a long time, such possibilities cannot be ruled out, and this poses serious obstacles within the forest.

“The insurgents use their bases in the Sambisa forest to launch deadly attacks and make quick retreat to their base.

“This enabled them to capture and take over control of local government areas bordering Nigeria and Cameroun, Chad and Niger,” he said.

The Borno elder said that Boko Haram almost succeeded in achieving their aim of encircling Maiduguri, the Borno capital, by cutting it off from all direction.

According to him, they were within 20 kilometres to Maiduguri from all directions except the Maiduguri-Kano axis, “which they infested and unleashed horrendous ambushes from time to time”.

He insisted that the Federal Government must first defeat Boko Haram by totally recapturing the forest from them before embarking on reconstruction and rehabilitation of the North-East.

Load more