UN Security Council Threatens Action Over Kidnapping Of Nigerian Girls

Started by HuffingtonPost, May 10, 2014, 01:31 AM

HuffingtonPost



UNITED NATIONS, May 9 (Reuters) - The U.N. Security Council  on Friday expressed outrage at the abduction of hundreds of  Nigerian school girls in two attacks by Islamist militants,  demanding their immediate release and threatening to take action  against the insurgents.                

Boko Haram kidnapped more than 250 girls from a secondary  school in Chibok in remote northeastern Nigeria on April 14 and  has threatened to sell them into slavery, prompting a U.N.  warning that the perpetrators would be liable for war crimes.                

Suspected Boko Haram gunmen kidnapped eight more girls from  a village near one of the Islamists' strongholds in northeastern  Nigeria, police and residents said on Tuesday.                

"The members of the Security Council expressed their  intention to actively follow the situation of the abducted girls  and to consider appropriate measures against Boko Haram," the  15-member council, which includes Nigeria, said in a statement.                

The council "demanded the immediate and unconditional  release of all abducted girls still in captivity and further  expressed their deep concern at statements made by the alleged  leader of Boko Haram threatening to sell these girls as slaves."                

The Security Council could blacklist Boko Haram and impose  targeted sanctions on members of the group, diplomats said.                

It also condemned the latest big Islamist attack in Nigeria,  the killing of 125 people on Monday when gunmen rampaged through  a town in the northeast near the Cameroon border.                

Boko Haram's five-year-old insurgency is aimed at reviving a  medieval Islamic caliphate in modern Nigeria, whose 170 million  people are split roughly evenly between Christians and Muslims,  and it is becoming by far the biggest security threat to  Africa's top oil producer.                

Several countries, including the United States, Britain,  France and China, have offered support to Nigeria to help find  the girls. British experts including diplomats, aid workers and  Ministry of Defence officials arrived in Nigeria on Friday to  advise the government on the search.                

"The members of the Security Council welcomed the ongoing  efforts of the Government of Nigeria to ensure the safe return  of the abducted girls to their families, as well as  international efforts to provide assistance to the Nigerian  authorities in this regard and bring the perpetrators to  justice," the statement said.                

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said on Thursday that  Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan had accepted his offer to  send a high-level U.N. envoy "to discuss how the United Nations  can better support the government's efforts to tackle the  internal challenges."                

Ban said in a statement that he was deeply concerned about  the fate of the school girls and that "the targeting of children  and schools is against international law and cannot be justified  under any circumstances."     (Reporting by Michelle Nichols; Editing by Leslie Adler)
Source: huffingtonpost.com