What this means is that the government may be forced to start negotiating with ISWAP too to secure Chibok schoolgirls and possibly Sharibu.
The remaining over 100 Chibok schoolgirls as well as
Dapchi school captive, Leah Sharibu, and other kidnap victims are feared to
have been transferred to the Islamic State West African Province Fighters who
overran the camp of Boko Haram factional leader, Abubakar Shekau, before
killing him weeks ago.
Military sources told SaharaReporters that intelligence showed the 112 Chibok girls were no longer in the custody of the Boko Haram terrorists and were feared to have been captured by the deadlier ISWAP faction, which is more into forced indoctrination.
Meanwhile, there are fears that Sharibu, who reportedly
had her second child in Boko Haram’s den after she was forcefully married to a
Boko Haram commander loyal to Shekau, may now be held by the ISWAP insurgents.
One of the sources said the overwhelmed military forces
are “fighting hard to prevent incursion of terrorists into the Nigerian
territory through Borno State and negotiations for the release or rescue of the
captives are solely with the Federal Government".
"Honestly, we don’t have enough military intelligence
and action for that. What is our priority is to secure our territories first,”
the source said.
“What this means is that the government may be forced to
start negotiating with ISWAP too to secure Chibok schoolgirls and possibly
Sharibu. The ISWAP is a more radical brand of religion and there are fears that
they may not be politically penetrable such as the Boko Haram,” another
intelligence officer said.
SaharaReporters had on May 20 reported that Shekau killed
himself during a violent clash between his faction and the ISWAP fighters who
overran the Sambisa Forest in Borno State.
Multiple military sources had confirmed to
SaharaReporters that Shekau blew up himself with an explosive when it was clear
that the ISWAP fighters wanted him to relinquish power to them, after all his
commanders were captured and killed in the forest.
ISWAP, which had broken away from the Shekau-led Boko
Haram faction in 2016 after pledging allegiance to the Islamic State, had
reportedly raided the group’s hideout using no fewer than 50 gun trucks.
Shekau had been the leader of Boko Haram since 2009
following the death of the group’s founder, Mohammed Yusuf. He had been
rumoured to have been killed by the Nigerian military at least four times
between July 2009 and August 2015.
The Chibok community under the Kibaku Area Development
Association (KADA) had only in April lamented that 112 Chibok schoolgirls were
still with the Boko Haram terrorists, noting that their rescue is no longer a
priority for the President Muhammadu Buhari government.
The Chibok community had said Buhari should be reminded
that he made a promise during his inauguration in May 2015 that “We cannot
claim to have defeated Boko Haram without rescuing the Chibok girls and all
other innocent persons held hostage by insurgents.”
Also on April 19, seven years after they were abducted,
the BringBackOurGirls movement released the names of 112 Chibok schoolgirls who
are still held in the custody of Boko Haram insurgents.
The Boko Haram insurgents had invaded the Government
Girls Secondary School in Chibok area of Borno State on April 14, 2014, and
abducted 276 schoolgirls preparing for their final-year examination.
Among them, 164 have either escaped, been released or rescued. Ever since the abduction of these girls, the Bring Back Our Girls movement has been at the forefront of the campaign.
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