Some of the 219 schoolgirls still in the custody
of Boko Haram insurgents have taken ill, according to a prominent Australian
cleric, Dr. Stephen Davis.
Davis, a hostage negotiator,
said the online publication of a British newspaper, The Mail on
Sunday, was hired by President Goodluck Jonathan to broker the
release of the girls.
According to the newspaper, the clergyman who was
once the Canon Emeritus at the Coventry Cathedral in London and a friend of The
Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, has been in
Nigeria working secretly on the release of the girls
for almost a month now.
It added that he was asked by the President to
come to Nigeria after previously brokering a truce between the Federal
Government and Niger Delta militants in 2004.
Along with Welby, he was frequently blindfolded
and held at gunpoint during his peace work in the Niger Delta.
He attributed his success in hostage negotiations
in Nigeria to “a long process of building trust on both sides.”
The Perth-born Australian described how fraught
the negotiation process had been but expressed optimism that the girls would be
freed.
He said, ‘One of that small group of girls is ill
and we had hoped we might convince the commander of the group holding her that
she should be released so we could give her medical treatment.
‘There are other girls who are not well and we
have come close to having them released but their captors fear a trap in which
they will be captured in the handover process.
‘One girl has what I assume is a broken wrist as
they demonstrate to me how she holds her hand. I have been told that others are
sick and in need of medical attention.
“But I am encouraged by the progress. Every day
there is the possibility of the release of the girls.
‘This is painful for the parents and the nation.
The well-being of the girls is constantly on our minds and we want to see their
release as soon as possible.”
The secret negotiator however ruled out the
possibility of a rescue since the girls were not being held in one location.
He said, “There are several groups to deal with
as the girls are held in several camps across the Nigerian border in Cameroon,
Chad and Niger. This makes any thought of a rescue highly improbable. To
attempt to rescue one group would only endanger the others. We must not
endanger their lives any further.
“The vast majority of the Chibok girls are not
being held in Nigeria.
“I say the ‘vast majority’as I know a small group
was confirmed to me to be in Nigeria last week when we sought to have them
released.”
Explaining that he had been to
military positions in the North-East in recent days, he said, ‘the troops and
their field commanders are doing all that can be done at this point.”
Last week, the Chief of Defence
Staff, Alex Badeh, said the military knew the location of the girls
and claimed that security agencies had been ‘following them’ since the abduction.
Badeh did not divulge details, saying doing so
would put the girls in further danger.
Sources said Badeh’s claim might have been the
result of government officials seeing a new, unpublished video allegedly sent
by the sect to President Goodluck Jonathan.
The Sunday Mail also quoted a military source on
Sunday as saying that with most of the girls outside the shores of Nigeria,
‘any sort of attempt to get to them would have to be cleared by the governments
of the other nations.’
The source added, ‘This has been a race against
time from the minute they were captured. As soon as the girls left Nigerian
soil it was always going to be more difficult.
‘The government made no attempt at a rescue until
a month after they were taken. Now the situation gets more serious by the day.”
The Mail on Sunday also
claimed that the new recorded video by Boko Haram
showed the girls bravely speaking out about their ordeal for the first time.
The footage, not released publicly but seen by
the newspaper, was taken in a jungle clearing a month after the
girls were abducted on April 14.
It also confirmed David’s claim that
a few of the girls were ill.
In the video, eight girls, dressed in
their school uniforms of pale blue gingham, plead for release as
they stand in front of a camera.
The newspaper said they were clearly scared,
upset and trying to be brave as they walked in turn to a spot in front of a
white sheet fixed to a frame between trees.
According to the publication, four of
the girls could be heard in Hausa Language, stating
that they were taken by force and that they were hungry.
One of them aged about 18 said tearfully, “My
family will be so worried.”
Another, speaking softly, said, “I never expected
to suffer like this in my life.’ A third said, ‘They have taken us
away by force” and the fourth complained that, “We are not getting
enough food.”
The video, allegedly taken by an intermediary on
May 19, said the newspaper, was intended to serve as ‘proof of
life’ for the girls and to Jonathan to accede to the terrorists’ demands.
Two earlier videos showed the girls seated on the
ground, dressed in hijabs, reciting the Koran.
In the videos, Boko Haram Leader, Abubakar
Shekau, declared he would sell the girls into slavery or marry them off to
their kidnappers if members of the sect in detention were not released.
Pressure from the international community and
criticism of the Jonathan’s slow response to the kidnapping had led to a series
of contradictory pronouncements from his government.
Some ministers have declared that government
would not negotiate with Boko Haram or consider the release of prisoners, while
official spokesmen said “the window is always open for dialogue.

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