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Amina Ali Nkeki


Showing posts with label Amina Ali Nkeki. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amina Ali Nkeki. Show all posts

I'm MISSING My Boko Haram Husband - Rescued Chibok Girl

I'm MISSING My Boko Haram Husband - Rescued Chibok Girl

I'm MISSING My The Father of My Child, I want To Go Home - Amina Ali Nkeki, Rescued Chibok Girl
The first rescued Chibok girls out of the over 200 girls kidnapped, Amina Ali has said she is missing her sex predator, Mohammed Hayatu, whom she bore her only child for. 

After her rescue in May, Amina has been kept at a secluded place in Abuja for what the presidency referred to as her "restoration process".

Speaking to Reuters, Amina said she doesn't know about going back to school but she wants to go home

“I just want to go home. I don’t know about school. I will decide about school when I get back, but I have no idea when I will be going home” she said speaking softly while staring at the ground.

About her sexual predator who is the father of her daughter, Amina says she still thinks about him and is sad that she has been separated from him.

“I want him to know that I am still thinking about him. Just because we got separated, that does not mean that I don’t think about him” she said
She said she hopes and pray that her colleagues who are still in Boko Haram captivity will be set free some day

"I think about them a lot. I would tell them to be hopeful and prayerful. In the same way God rescued me, he will also rescue them” she said

How I Increase My Blokos Size & Stopped Premature Ejaculation Issues That Scattered My Relationship For 2years.. Click HERE for Details 



I'm MISSING My The Father of My Child, I want To Go Home - Amina Ali Nkeki, Rescued Chibok Girl
The first rescued Chibok girls out of the over 200 girls kidnapped, Amina Ali has said she is missing her sex predator, Mohammed Hayatu, whom she bore her only child for. 

After her rescue in May, Amina has been kept at a secluded place in Abuja for what the presidency referred to as her "restoration process".

Speaking to Reuters, Amina said she doesn't know about going back to school but she wants to go home

“I just want to go home. I don’t know about school. I will decide about school when I get back, but I have no idea when I will be going home” she said speaking softly while staring at the ground.

About her sexual predator who is the father of her daughter, Amina says she still thinks about him and is sad that she has been separated from him.

“I want him to know that I am still thinking about him. Just because we got separated, that does not mean that I don’t think about him” she said
She said she hopes and pray that her colleagues who are still in Boko Haram captivity will be set free some day

"I think about them a lot. I would tell them to be hopeful and prayerful. In the same way God rescued me, he will also rescue them” she said

How I Increase My Blokos Size & Stopped Premature Ejaculation Issues That Scattered My Relationship For 2years.. Click HERE for Details 



RESCUED Chibok Girl, Amina Nkeki 'MISSING'

RESCUED Chibok Girl, Amina Nkeki 'MISSING'

nkeki
Nigeria’s Bring Back Our Girls movement is demanding that the government provides news of the only Chibok schoolgirl among 219 kidnapped to escape the clutches of Boko Haram Islamic extremists.

“Even this morning people came to my house asking if I had been able to find out her whereabouts. It’s outrageous! Some people are crying!” Yakubu Nkeki, an uncle of Amina Ali Nkeki, told The Associated Press by telephone on Thursday.

“We don’t understand why the government wants to keep her family away” after her captivity of more than two years,” he said.

Hunters found Ali last month wandering on the fringes of Boko Haram’s Sambisa Forest stronghold with her four-month-old baby and the child’s father, a Boko Haram fighter, whom she said helped her escape.

She was flown to the capital, Abuja, for a televised meeting at which President Muhammadu Buhari promised her the best care, rehabilitation and education.

The Bring Back Our Girls movement says no one has seen her since.

Human Rights Watch asked if she is detained. “Nigerian authorities should clarify Amina’s present legal status. Is she a detainee? On what charges? Is her isolation, along with her mother and baby, of her own free will or forced by authorities?” the London-based rights organization’s Nigeria researcher, Mausi Segun, said to the AP.

The Defense Ministry spokesman, Brig. Gen. Rabe Abubakar, did not answer that question but said that Ali’s privacy needs to be protected.

“Nobody is hiding anybody,” he told the AP. “We have to safeguard her and give her all the necessary security for her to recuperate well. … As soon as everything is sorted out, Amina would be made accessible.”

In a statement Wednesday night marking the 800th day of the mass abduction that outraged the world, Bring Back Our Girls also asked what the government is doing to rescue the other schoolgirls.

“We are extremely disappointed with the evident lull in rescue actions and lack of any progress report,” according to the statement signed by the movement’s founders Aisha Yesufu and Oby Ezekwesili.

It said that Ali said some of the girls have died but most are alive, raising hopes they could still be rescued.

Government, presidential and military officials did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Charities have accused Buhari’s government of exploiting Ali and politicizing her escape, for which the army tried to claim responsibility.

Ali’s uncle said the last time he saw her, along with baby Safiyah and mother Binta Nkeki, was in the office of the National Security Adviser at the presidential villa on May 19.

“We have had no credible information since, though I am told they are in the hands of the government,” he said.

It had been presumed that Ali would be debriefed by state security agents for information that could lead to a rescue operation.

One problem could be that Ali has been insisting that she wants only to be reunited with Mohammed Hayyatu, the Boko Haram fighter she credits for her escape and the father of her child, according to a Borno State official. The official, who spoke to Ali after she escaped and has had contact with her debriefers, insisted on speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.

Nigeria’s military has said that Hayyatu appeared to be a Boko Haram commander and is being held for interrogation.

Bring Back Our Girls demanded the government prosecute Hayyatu for abduction and rape.

The AP has been unable to establish the whereabouts of some other freed Boko Haram captives taken for alleged debriefing and counseling by the office of the National Security Adviser. They include Binta Ibrahim, whom U.S. Ambassador Samantha Power has called a hero for saving three Christian children held with her in captivity by Boko Haram for 15 months.

Soldiers have freed thousands of Boko Haram captives this year as they have recaptured large swaths of territory where Boko Haram had declared an Islamic caliphate.''

nkeki
Nigeria’s Bring Back Our Girls movement is demanding that the government provides news of the only Chibok schoolgirl among 219 kidnapped to escape the clutches of Boko Haram Islamic extremists.

“Even this morning people came to my house asking if I had been able to find out her whereabouts. It’s outrageous! Some people are crying!” Yakubu Nkeki, an uncle of Amina Ali Nkeki, told The Associated Press by telephone on Thursday.

“We don’t understand why the government wants to keep her family away” after her captivity of more than two years,” he said.

Hunters found Ali last month wandering on the fringes of Boko Haram’s Sambisa Forest stronghold with her four-month-old baby and the child’s father, a Boko Haram fighter, whom she said helped her escape.

She was flown to the capital, Abuja, for a televised meeting at which President Muhammadu Buhari promised her the best care, rehabilitation and education.

The Bring Back Our Girls movement says no one has seen her since.

Human Rights Watch asked if she is detained. “Nigerian authorities should clarify Amina’s present legal status. Is she a detainee? On what charges? Is her isolation, along with her mother and baby, of her own free will or forced by authorities?” the London-based rights organization’s Nigeria researcher, Mausi Segun, said to the AP.

The Defense Ministry spokesman, Brig. Gen. Rabe Abubakar, did not answer that question but said that Ali’s privacy needs to be protected.

“Nobody is hiding anybody,” he told the AP. “We have to safeguard her and give her all the necessary security for her to recuperate well. … As soon as everything is sorted out, Amina would be made accessible.”

In a statement Wednesday night marking the 800th day of the mass abduction that outraged the world, Bring Back Our Girls also asked what the government is doing to rescue the other schoolgirls.

“We are extremely disappointed with the evident lull in rescue actions and lack of any progress report,” according to the statement signed by the movement’s founders Aisha Yesufu and Oby Ezekwesili.

It said that Ali said some of the girls have died but most are alive, raising hopes they could still be rescued.

Government, presidential and military officials did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Charities have accused Buhari’s government of exploiting Ali and politicizing her escape, for which the army tried to claim responsibility.

Ali’s uncle said the last time he saw her, along with baby Safiyah and mother Binta Nkeki, was in the office of the National Security Adviser at the presidential villa on May 19.

“We have had no credible information since, though I am told they are in the hands of the government,” he said.

It had been presumed that Ali would be debriefed by state security agents for information that could lead to a rescue operation.

One problem could be that Ali has been insisting that she wants only to be reunited with Mohammed Hayyatu, the Boko Haram fighter she credits for her escape and the father of her child, according to a Borno State official. The official, who spoke to Ali after she escaped and has had contact with her debriefers, insisted on speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.

Nigeria’s military has said that Hayyatu appeared to be a Boko Haram commander and is being held for interrogation.

Bring Back Our Girls demanded the government prosecute Hayyatu for abduction and rape.

The AP has been unable to establish the whereabouts of some other freed Boko Haram captives taken for alleged debriefing and counseling by the office of the National Security Adviser. They include Binta Ibrahim, whom U.S. Ambassador Samantha Power has called a hero for saving three Christian children held with her in captivity by Boko Haram for 15 months.

Soldiers have freed thousands of Boko Haram captives this year as they have recaptured large swaths of territory where Boko Haram had declared an Islamic caliphate.''

SAD! Over 70 Chibok Girls Died Already, Boko Haram Leader Says, Ready For Talks With FG To Release Others

SAD! Over 70 Chibok Girls Died Already, Boko Haram Leader Says, Ready For Talks With FG To Release Others

Fresh report according to London Times, reported on The Nationa Newspaper suggests that over 70 of the 219 Chibok girls abducted over two years ago have died.

News Punch gathered that the dread sect, Boko Haram, having been battered by the renewed fight against it by the Nigerian troops, is ready to discuss surrender and release of Chibok girls

Terror sect Boko Haram seems to willing to broker a deal with the federal government to release the remaining kidnapped Chibok school girls in return for escaping prosecution.

Over 200 students of the Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State, were seized two years ago and have not been traced or found.

The Times of London believes only a third of them remain alive, according to the sect leader.

The paper reported that senior members of the terrorist group said it was prepared to negotiate a surrender and release the hostages on the condition they would not be not betrayed by the government or killed for giving up arms.

“We want to surrender because things are getting worse,” said Amir Muhammad Abdullahi, who is reportedly Boko Haram’s second in command. He said no side was winning the battle and that only a third of the girls remained as “the rest have been martyred”.

Two Chibok girls have been found in the last one week – one of whom called Amina Ali Darsha Nkeki – was found near Sambisa forest.

However, there was confusion mounting over whether the second girl, Serah Luka, who was freed in a raid on a Boko Haram camp on 19 May, was from Chibok.

A strategic member of the Bring Back Our Girls campaign group, Jeff Okoroafor said yesterday that the body would stand by the report from the just rescued Amina Ali that only six of the Chibok girls had died.

Okoroafor said the group’s leaders were not aware of the latest report that only one third of the Chibok girls were alive.

According to him, “We stand by Amina’s report. Until we get some more concrete and verifiable, we will hold on to what she has said that only six of the girls have died and others are still alive.”
Fresh report according to London Times, reported on The Nationa Newspaper suggests that over 70 of the 219 Chibok girls abducted over two years ago have died.

News Punch gathered that the dread sect, Boko Haram, having been battered by the renewed fight against it by the Nigerian troops, is ready to discuss surrender and release of Chibok girls

Terror sect Boko Haram seems to willing to broker a deal with the federal government to release the remaining kidnapped Chibok school girls in return for escaping prosecution.

Over 200 students of the Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State, were seized two years ago and have not been traced or found.

The Times of London believes only a third of them remain alive, according to the sect leader.

The paper reported that senior members of the terrorist group said it was prepared to negotiate a surrender and release the hostages on the condition they would not be not betrayed by the government or killed for giving up arms.

“We want to surrender because things are getting worse,” said Amir Muhammad Abdullahi, who is reportedly Boko Haram’s second in command. He said no side was winning the battle and that only a third of the girls remained as “the rest have been martyred”.

Two Chibok girls have been found in the last one week – one of whom called Amina Ali Darsha Nkeki – was found near Sambisa forest.

However, there was confusion mounting over whether the second girl, Serah Luka, who was freed in a raid on a Boko Haram camp on 19 May, was from Chibok.

A strategic member of the Bring Back Our Girls campaign group, Jeff Okoroafor said yesterday that the body would stand by the report from the just rescued Amina Ali that only six of the Chibok girls had died.

Okoroafor said the group’s leaders were not aware of the latest report that only one third of the Chibok girls were alive.

According to him, “We stand by Amina’s report. Until we get some more concrete and verifiable, we will hold on to what she has said that only six of the girls have died and others are still alive.”

Amina Nkeki Reveals More Horrific Tale Of Other Chibok Girls As Parents of Other Abductees Throng Her Home

Amina Nkeki Reveals More Horrific Tale Of Other Chibok Girls As Parents of Other Abductees Throng Her Home

Amina Ali Darsha Nkeki,
The News - The father of a missing Chibok schoolgirl who spoke privately to Amina Ali Darsha Nkeki, rescued this week in remote northeastern Nigeria, said after hearing about her ordeal at the hands of Boko Haram he told her not to repeat the horrific story to other parents.

Yakubu Nkeki, whose daughter Maimuna was among the 219 girls abducted from a school in the town of Chibok more than two years ago, spoke to Amina on Thursday after the she met President Muhammadu Buhari.

“I called her ‘Kwadudu’,” he said, describing how Amina smiled and grabbed his hand as soon as she heard her pet name from childhood, which means ‘only daughter’. “She looked relieved.”

For an hour he listened to Amina, who was found on Tuesday by soldiers and vigilantes with her four-month-old baby, recall some of her experiences over the past two years, he said.

“She told me that she last saw my daughter about a year ago before the girls were separated,” said Nkeki who lives next door to Amina’s family in Mbalala village near Chibok.

Once he had heard her story, “I told her not to tell anybody some of the things she told me. I told her that she should stop talking,” he said.

But other parents from Chibok, whose daughters were abducted by Boko Haram’s Islamist militants in April 2014 said they were eager to hear more from Amina.

“I want to see her so that she can tell me about my daughter,” said Samuel Yaga, who a few years ago moved his family from Chibok to Banki, a town on the border with Cameroon, but left his daughter Sarah behind at school on the advice of a teacher who said her education should not be disrupted.

But the threat of Boko Haram violence forced him to move again, to a village on the outskirts of the capital Abuja.

“I want to know if my daughter is alive or not,” said Yaga, who plans to formally wed Rebecca, Sarah’s mother and his wife under customary law, at a church ceremony on Sunday.

Back in Chibok, the news of Amina’s rescue has given some parents hope of their own daughters being found, according to Yana Galang, the women’s leader of the parents association campaigning for the rescue of the girls.

“As long as we can get correct information from her (Amina’s) mouth, I think the government will do something about it,” said Yana, whose daughter Rifkatu, is among the missing.

“She can tell the true story about these girls.”

Adapted from TheNews Magazine
Amina Ali Darsha Nkeki,
The News - The father of a missing Chibok schoolgirl who spoke privately to Amina Ali Darsha Nkeki, rescued this week in remote northeastern Nigeria, said after hearing about her ordeal at the hands of Boko Haram he told her not to repeat the horrific story to other parents.

Yakubu Nkeki, whose daughter Maimuna was among the 219 girls abducted from a school in the town of Chibok more than two years ago, spoke to Amina on Thursday after the she met President Muhammadu Buhari.

“I called her ‘Kwadudu’,” he said, describing how Amina smiled and grabbed his hand as soon as she heard her pet name from childhood, which means ‘only daughter’. “She looked relieved.”

For an hour he listened to Amina, who was found on Tuesday by soldiers and vigilantes with her four-month-old baby, recall some of her experiences over the past two years, he said.

“She told me that she last saw my daughter about a year ago before the girls were separated,” said Nkeki who lives next door to Amina’s family in Mbalala village near Chibok.

Once he had heard her story, “I told her not to tell anybody some of the things she told me. I told her that she should stop talking,” he said.

But other parents from Chibok, whose daughters were abducted by Boko Haram’s Islamist militants in April 2014 said they were eager to hear more from Amina.

“I want to see her so that she can tell me about my daughter,” said Samuel Yaga, who a few years ago moved his family from Chibok to Banki, a town on the border with Cameroon, but left his daughter Sarah behind at school on the advice of a teacher who said her education should not be disrupted.

But the threat of Boko Haram violence forced him to move again, to a village on the outskirts of the capital Abuja.

“I want to know if my daughter is alive or not,” said Yaga, who plans to formally wed Rebecca, Sarah’s mother and his wife under customary law, at a church ceremony on Sunday.

Back in Chibok, the news of Amina’s rescue has given some parents hope of their own daughters being found, according to Yana Galang, the women’s leader of the parents association campaigning for the rescue of the girls.

“As long as we can get correct information from her (Amina’s) mouth, I think the government will do something about it,” said Yana, whose daughter Rifkatu, is among the missing.

“She can tell the true story about these girls.”

Adapted from TheNews Magazine

Identity, DETAILS of 2nd Rescued Chibok Girl, Serah Luka Released By Rescuer

Identity, DETAILS of 2nd Rescued Chibok Girl, Serah Luka Released By Rescuer

Identity, DETAILS of 2nd Rescued Chibok Girl, Serah Luka Released By Rescuer
More details on how the second rescued Chibok girl was rescued have been made public by the Nigerian Army Headquarters.

In a statement released by the spokesman of the army, Col. Sani Kukasheka Usman said;

"At about 11.00am today, Thursday, 19th May 2016, troops of 231 Battalion, 331 Artillery Regiment (AR), Detachment of Armed Forces Special Forces (AFSF) 2, Explosive Ordinance (EOD) Team and Civilian Vigilante group of Buratai, conducted clearance operations at Shettima Aboh, Hong and Biladdili general area in Damboa Local Government Area of Borno State."

"During the operations, the troops killed 35 Boko Haram terrorists and recovered several arms and ammunitions and other items."

"In addition, they rescued 97 women and children held captives by the Boko Haram terrorists. We are glad to state that among those rescued is a girl believed to be one of the Chibok Government Secondary School girls that were abducted on 14th April 2014 by the Boko Haram terrorists."

"Her name is Miss Serah Luka, who is number 157 on the list of the abducted school girls. 

But Check on the list of kidnapped girls provided by a #BringBackOurGirls rep in the US which shows one "Kuana Luka" which is number 154 on their list.

 The statement continued; 

"She is believed to be the daughter of Pastor Luka. During debriefing the girl revealed that she was a JSS1 student of the school at the time they were abducted. She further added that she hails from Madagali, Adamawa State."

"She averred that she reported at the school barely two months and one week before her unfortunate abduction along with other girls over two years ago."

"She added that there other three girls who fled from Shettima Aboh when the troops invaded the area earlier today which led to their rescue."

"She is presently receiving medical attention at the medical facility of Abogo Largema Cantonment, Biu, Borno State."

"Thank you for your kind and usual cooperation."
The statement revealed that, during the debriefing, Ms. Luka disclosed that “she was a JSS1 student of the school” at the time of the abduction. “She further added that she hails from Madagali, Adamawa State,” said the military. 

According to the military, the rescued girl informed the military that three other abducted girls had fled from Shettima Aboh when the troops invaded the area earlier today. The rescued schoolgirl “is presently receiving medical attention at the medical facility of Abogo Largema Cantonment, Biu, Borno State,” said the military statement.

Amina Ali Nkeki had earlier been rescued by the local vigilante called the Civilian JTF


Identity, DETAILS of 2nd Rescued Chibok Girl, Serah Luka Released By Rescuer
More details on how the second rescued Chibok girl was rescued have been made public by the Nigerian Army Headquarters.

In a statement released by the spokesman of the army, Col. Sani Kukasheka Usman said;

"At about 11.00am today, Thursday, 19th May 2016, troops of 231 Battalion, 331 Artillery Regiment (AR), Detachment of Armed Forces Special Forces (AFSF) 2, Explosive Ordinance (EOD) Team and Civilian Vigilante group of Buratai, conducted clearance operations at Shettima Aboh, Hong and Biladdili general area in Damboa Local Government Area of Borno State."

"During the operations, the troops killed 35 Boko Haram terrorists and recovered several arms and ammunitions and other items."

"In addition, they rescued 97 women and children held captives by the Boko Haram terrorists. We are glad to state that among those rescued is a girl believed to be one of the Chibok Government Secondary School girls that were abducted on 14th April 2014 by the Boko Haram terrorists."

"Her name is Miss Serah Luka, who is number 157 on the list of the abducted school girls. 

But Check on the list of kidnapped girls provided by a #BringBackOurGirls rep in the US which shows one "Kuana Luka" which is number 154 on their list.

 The statement continued; 

"She is believed to be the daughter of Pastor Luka. During debriefing the girl revealed that she was a JSS1 student of the school at the time they were abducted. She further added that she hails from Madagali, Adamawa State."

"She averred that she reported at the school barely two months and one week before her unfortunate abduction along with other girls over two years ago."

"She added that there other three girls who fled from Shettima Aboh when the troops invaded the area earlier today which led to their rescue."

"She is presently receiving medical attention at the medical facility of Abogo Largema Cantonment, Biu, Borno State."

"Thank you for your kind and usual cooperation."
The statement revealed that, during the debriefing, Ms. Luka disclosed that “she was a JSS1 student of the school” at the time of the abduction. “She further added that she hails from Madagali, Adamawa State,” said the military. 

According to the military, the rescued girl informed the military that three other abducted girls had fled from Shettima Aboh when the troops invaded the area earlier today. The rescued schoolgirl “is presently receiving medical attention at the medical facility of Abogo Largema Cantonment, Biu, Borno State,” said the military statement.

Amina Ali Nkeki had earlier been rescued by the local vigilante called the Civilian JTF


From Sambisa Forest To Govt. House Abuja: When Buhari Meets Chibok Rescued Girl Today - Photos

From Sambisa Forest To Govt. House Abuja: When Buhari Meets Chibok Rescued Girl Today - Photos

Amina Nkeki Meets president muhammadu buhari
Pres. Buhari met Amina, her baby, her mum and others
at the State House in Abuja this afternoon

Amina Nkeki Meets president muhammadu buhari

Amina Nkeki Meets president muhammadu buhari

Amina Nkeki Meets president muhammadu buhari

Amina Nkeki Meets president muhammadu buhari
Pres. Buhari met Amina, her baby, her mum and others
at the State House in Abuja this afternoon

Amina Nkeki Meets president muhammadu buhari

Amina Nkeki Meets president muhammadu buhari

Amina Nkeki Meets president muhammadu buhari

BREAKING: Missing Chibok Girl Found In Sambisa Forest 2yrs After - BBC Reports

BREAKING: Missing Chibok Girl Found In Sambisa Forest 2yrs After - BBC Reports

BREAKING: Missing Chibok Girl Found In Sambisa Forest - BBC Reports
New report from BBC News suggests that one of the missing Chibok girls, Amina Ali Nkeki has been found in Nigeria, activists say – the first since they were taken by Boko Haram militants two years ago.

The 276 girls were taken from their secondary school in north-east Nigeria by the Islamist fighters in April 2014. 

In all, 218 girls remain missing after their abduction from a secondary school in north-east Nigeria in April 2014.

Activists told the BBC that Amina Ali Nkeki was found by a vigilante group on Tuesday in the Sambisa Forest, close to the border with Cameroon.

The girls were taken by militants from the Boko Haram Islamist group.

Amina was reportedly identified by a civilian fighter who recognised her. The fighter belonged to the Civilian Joint Task Force (JTF), a vigilante group set up to help fight Boko Haram.

Hosea Abana Tsambido, the chairman of the Chibok community in the capital, Abuja, told the BBC that Amina was found by the vigilantes after venturing into the forest to search for firewood.

Sources told the BBC she came from the town of Mbalala, south of Chibok, from where 25 of the kidnapped girls came. A neighbour in Mbalala told the BBC that Amina was found with a baby.

An uncle, Yakubu Nkeki, told Associated Press news agency that Amina was later reunited with her mother in Chibok. She was 17 when abducted and is now 19, he said.

Amina is expected to be moved soon to Maiduguri, the capital of Nigeria's Borno state.



Source: BBC News
BREAKING: Missing Chibok Girl Found In Sambisa Forest - BBC Reports
New report from BBC News suggests that one of the missing Chibok girls, Amina Ali Nkeki has been found in Nigeria, activists say – the first since they were taken by Boko Haram militants two years ago.

The 276 girls were taken from their secondary school in north-east Nigeria by the Islamist fighters in April 2014. 

In all, 218 girls remain missing after their abduction from a secondary school in north-east Nigeria in April 2014.

Activists told the BBC that Amina Ali Nkeki was found by a vigilante group on Tuesday in the Sambisa Forest, close to the border with Cameroon.

The girls were taken by militants from the Boko Haram Islamist group.

Amina was reportedly identified by a civilian fighter who recognised her. The fighter belonged to the Civilian Joint Task Force (JTF), a vigilante group set up to help fight Boko Haram.

Hosea Abana Tsambido, the chairman of the Chibok community in the capital, Abuja, told the BBC that Amina was found by the vigilantes after venturing into the forest to search for firewood.

Sources told the BBC she came from the town of Mbalala, south of Chibok, from where 25 of the kidnapped girls came. A neighbour in Mbalala told the BBC that Amina was found with a baby.

An uncle, Yakubu Nkeki, told Associated Press news agency that Amina was later reunited with her mother in Chibok. She was 17 when abducted and is now 19, he said.

Amina is expected to be moved soon to Maiduguri, the capital of Nigeria's Borno state.



Source: BBC News

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