A video released in January by Boko Haram showed at least 14 of the abducted schoolgirls
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A total of 219 girls were taken from the Government Girls Secondary School in the remote town in Borno state on the evening of April 14, 2014 and have become an enduring symbol of the Islamist insurgency.
Four years on, 112 are still being held.
On Friday
night, about 100 people attended a vigil in Nigeria's biggest city,
Lagos, under a busy flyover whose pillars are now adorned with brightly
painted murals of the missing girls.
"We are here to show (the)
government that we are still missing our sisters," Zakaria Galang, a
brother of one of the students who is yet to return, told AFP.
Further events are planned in the capital, Abuja, on Saturday.
- 'All hope is not lost' -
Nigeria's
president in 2014, Goodluck Jonathan, was heavily criticised for his
response to the abduction but the man who replaced him, Muhammadu
Buhari, has had more success.
Another activist, Habiba Balogun, said she hoped that would happen after nearly nine years of violence that has left at least 20,000 dead and made more than 2.6 million homeless.
"The government has said that they are ready to negotiate; they want to bring this nightmare to an end," she said.
Buhari
pledged to the Chibok girls' parents that their daughters "will never
be forgotten or abandoned to their fate" despite the time that had
passed.
The former military ruler has repeatedly claimed Boko
Haram was virtually defeated but while there have been clear army gains,
security threats remain.
In February, fighters loyal to a Boko
Haram faction headed by Abu Mus'ab al-Barnawi seized 112 schoolgirls and
one boy from the town of Dapchi, in Yobe state.
AFP / PIUS UTOMI EKPEI Four years after their kidnap, 112 of the Chibok schoolgirls are still being held |
Buhari said the return of so many students from Dapchi and Chibok "should give confidence that all hope is not lost" and showed the government was "doing its very best".
There had been "unexpected setbacks" in talks because of infighting within Boko Haram.
But
he added: "We will continue to persist, and the parents should please
not give up. Don't give up hope of seeing our daughters back home
again."
- 'Meaningful action' -
Boko Haram has used
kidnapping as a weapon of war during the conflict, seizing women and
girls to act as sex slaves or suicide bombers, and men and boys to
fight.
UNICEF said this week more than 1,000 children had been
verified as abducted in northeast Nigeria since 2013, although the real
figure is estimated to be much higher.
Amnesty International's Nigeria director, Osai Ojigho, said the Chibok abduction was a small part of a bigger issue.
The government needed to deliver "meaningful action on behalf of all these victims of Boko Haram's crimes".
The International Crisis Group meanwhile said the copycat abduction in Dapchi showed more needed to be done to protect schoolchildren in the restive region.
"The abductions illustrate that Boko Haram remains a
menace to swathes of northeast Nigeria," it added in a report published
on Thursday.
"They throw into doubt the government's claim to have
defeated the movement; instead, insurgents may be newly emboldened to
keep fighting.
"The kidnappings cast a pall over education,
particularly of girls, and thus the prospects for socio-economic
development of the region."
AFP
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