Campaigners
on Friday questioned a Nigerian military claim that a second Chibok schoolgirl
had been rescued, but the army maintained she was one of the 219 abducted by
Boko Haram.
Yakubu
Nkeki, the head of the Chibok Abducted Girls Parents group, told the AFP the
military contacted him before an announcement was made on Wednesday about the
discovery of the first girl, Amina Ali.
“We
were able to identify her and then establish her parents,” he told AFP. But
there was no call before Nigeria’s army announced late Thursday that a second
schoolgirl had been rescued.
She
was said to be Serah Luka, who was among 97 women and children rescued earlier
that day in the Damboa area of the northeastern state of Borno.
She
told troops and civilian vigilantes she was a Christian pastor’s daughter
originally from Madagali, in neighbouring Adamawa state, and had been in Chibok
to sit her exams.
Nkeki
said his records showed only two girls with the surname Luka.
“These
are Kauna Luka Yana and Naomi Luka Dzakwa. Among the list of parents we have
only four priests and none of them is Luka,” he added.
“Among
the girls none of them is from Madagali. They were either from Chibok, Damboa,
Askira and Uba (all in Borno state). So I can say… that this girl is not among
the abducted Chibok girls.
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