Boko Haram has released nearly 200
hostages, most of them women, who were kidnapped from a village in the
northeast Nigerian state of Yobe, a community leader and a military source told
AFP Saturday reports www.odogwublog.com with agency report.
A
total of 192 people were released on Friday from two Islamist enclaves, where
they had been kept since a January 6 raid on Katarko, 20 kilometres (12 miles)
from the state capital Damaturu.
In
all, 218 women and children were abducted.
"Boko
Haram have released 192 of our women they kidnapped early this month,"
Goni Mari, a Katarko community leader told AFP from Damaturu.
"They
brought them in two batches in four trucks and dropped them at Girbuwa village,
eight kilometres from Damaturu, from where we conveyed them to the city and
they were taken into government custody."
The
raid on Katarko saw dozens of Boko Haram gunmen storm the village, where they
killed 25 men and burnt homes and businesses before kidnapping the women and
children.
The
attack was apparently in retaliation over a raid by local hunters and
vigilantes in nearby Buni Yadi, where several militants were killed and scores
more arrested, vigilantes said at the time.
But
with Boko Haram raids a near daily occurence in the restive northeast, and no
precise figures on the numbers of people taken, the attack received little
publicity.
Boko
Haram fought running battles with troops in Damaturu the following Friday,
again in an apparent reprisal to the Buni Yadi raid.
This April 21, 2014 photo shows the Chibok public
school where more than 200 schoolgirls were abduct …
A
military officer, who requested anonymity because he was not authorised to
speak to the media, also confirmed the release of the hostages.
Mass
abduction has been a feature of Boko Haram's bloody six-year insurgency, with
young men and boys forcibly conscripted to fight alongside the militants.
Women
and young girls have been taken to be wives for the Islamists, with reports
from those who were freed or escaped of forced labour, sexual and psychological
abuse.
-
Young boys still held -
Mari
said his wife, two daughters and seven-year old son were among the released
hostages, who were taken by the authorities to a primary school.
But
he said Boko Haram was still holding 26 young boys, including his 10-year old
son.
His
seven-year-old son was rescued after his mother disguised him as a girl in
hijab.
The
official added that the hostages said they were released because they refused
to fight alongside the militants, who called them "infidels".
"From
the information my wife told me, they were asked by their captors if they
wanted to join Boko Haram and fight jihad with them," Mari said.
"When
they declined they packed them into four trucks and dumped them at Girbuwa and
told them to go and meet their fellow infidels in Damaturu."
A
local politician from the area, who asked not to be identified, said Boko Haram
kept the hostages in the town of Buni Yadi and Ajigin village, which they
seized several months ago.
"They
(Boko Haram) are still holding 26 young boys they abducted along with the
released hostages in Katarko," the politician confirmed.
Human
Rights Watch said in a report published in October last year that more than 500
women and girls have been abducted since the start of the insurgency in 2009.
But
other estimates put the figure far higher.
Boko
Haram's most notorious mass abduction was in April last year, when it seized
276 schoolgirls from the town of Chibok, in Borno State, triggering global
outrage.
Fifty-seven
managed to escape but 219 are still being held.
Last
month at least 185 people, including women and children, were kidnapped during
an attack in the town of Gumsuri, some 70 kilometres from Chibok.
(AFP)
Breakng News: Boko Haram Releases 200 Hostages in Yobe
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Sunday, January 25, 2015
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