Those still alive said they were optimistic their daughters were alive and called on the federal government to rescue them.
It is exactly seven years today (Wednesday) when Boko Haram terrorists stormed GGSS Chibok on April 14, 2014, forced 276 girls into a truck and moved towards the Sambisa Forest.
While some of the girls hung unto tree branches on the way to the forest and thereafter found their ways back home, others were not that lucky.
However, after the escape of a few and the release of over 100 through negotiations over time, most of the over 107 of the Chibok girls that have been reunited with their families are still struggling to be on their feet.
Children displaced in the Boko Haram conflict are on a path to success thanks to a school prioritizing peace
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Children displaced in the Boko Haram conflict are on a path to success thanks to a school prioritizing peace
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The Nansen Award was one of the most inspiring things in my life
Nansen Award laureate Zannah Mustapha takes stock of how his life – and those of the children displaced by Boko Haram – has changed since he won the award in 2017.
Nansen Laureate Zannah Mustapha, poses for a photo in Borno State, Nigeria, where some 2,000 orphans attend his Future Prowess Schools.
© UNHCR/Roland Schönbauer
By Roland Schönbauer in Maiduguri, Nigeria | 21 December 2020
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Three years ago, Zannah Mustapha was named the winner of the UNHCR Nansen Refugee Award for providing orphans of Nigeria’s Boko Haram insurgency with an education.