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NEWS and REPORTS => World News => Topic started by: HuffingtonPost on Jul 14, 2014, 05:31 PM

Title: #News: Kidnapped Nigerian Schoolgirls Will Return Home 'Soon,' Nation's President Pledges To Malala
Post by: HuffingtonPost on Jul 14, 2014, 05:31 PM


* Teenage activist backs campaign for abducted girls' return                

* Malala says Goodluck Jonathan made pledge during meeting                

* She survived Taliban shooting, is education rights heroine                

By Felix Onuah                

ABUJA, July 14 (Reuters) - Nigeria's President Goodluck  Jonathan promised on Monday that more than 200 Nigerian  schoolgirls kidnapped by Islamist militants would "soon" return  home, teenage Pakistani activist Malala Yousafzai said after  meeting him.                

Malala, who became a global celebrity after surviving being  shot in the head by the Taliban for campaigning for girls'  education, was visiting Nigeria to support an international  campaign for the release of the teenage students abducted in  mid-April by the Islamist insurgent group Boko Haram.                

The Pakistani teenager, who turned 17 on Saturday, at the  weekend met parents of the schoolgirls snatched from the  northeastern village of Chibok by Boko Haram fighters.                

The Nigerian girls' plight triggered an international  #BringBackOurGirls Twitter campaign supported by Michelle Obama  and Angelina Jolie. This drew global attention to the war in  Nigeria's northeast and the growing security risk that Boko  Haram poses to Nigeria, Africa's leading energy producer.                

But, with the girls still missing three months after their  April 14 kidnap, Jonathan faces criticism at home and abroad  over the deteriorating security situation.                

"The president promised me ... that the abducted girls will  return to their homes soon," Malala, who has called the 219  missing students her "sisters", told a news conference after a  45-minute meeting with Jonathan at the presidential villa.                

She did not say whether the Nigerian leader had given her  any fresh details of the military search operation for the girls  to support his assurance. Nigeria is receiving intelligence and  surveillance assistance from the United States, Britain, France  and other foreign allies but has so far shown little progress in  getting the Chibok girls back.                

Malala said she would hold the Nigerian leader to his  pledge. "I will from now be counting days and will be looking. I  can't stop this campaign until I see these girls return back to  their families and continue their education," she said.                

She added that Jonathan had also promised that once the  missing girls were rescued, they would be given scholarships to  go to school in any part of Nigeria.                

Pressed by journalists on what the president had told her,  Malala said Jonathan described the girls' situation as  "complicated" and that their lives could be put at risk by a  military rescue attempt.                

"But the president said these girls are his daughters and he  is pained by their sufferings and that he has his own daughters  and he can feel what they are feeling ... He has several options  but ... he will choose the best to ensure the girls are released  safely," she said.                

Pakistani Taliban militants shot Malala for her passionate  advocacy of women's right to education. She survived after being  airlifted to Britain for treatment, and has since become a  symbol of defiance against the militants operating in the tribal  areas along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.                

She has won the European Union's prestigious human rights  award and was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize last year.                

Boko Haram, inspired by the Taliban, say they are fighting  to establish an Islamic state in religiously mixed Nigeria. The  group, whose name means "Western education is sinful", has  killed thousands and abducted hundreds since launching an  uprising in 2009.                

Now considered the main security threat to Nigeria, the  insurgency is growing bolder. Police said on Saturday they had  uncovered a plot to bomb the Abuja transport network using  suicide bombers and devices concealed in luggage at major bus  stations.      (Writing by Pascal Fletcher; Editing by Hugh Lawson)
Source: huffingtonPost