The Chibok girl who escaped after more than two years as a prisoner of Boko Haram is now with the governor of her state where she is being treated like a “VIP guest,” an official has told CNN.
Amina Ali was limping and severely malnourished when she arrived with her baby at the home of Kashim Shettima, governor of Borno state in northeast Nigeria on Wednesday night, after being released from military custody, the state government official told CNN.
“She is receiving high-level medical attention and the best doctors in the state are attending to her. The governor ordered for her release from the military as he wanted to make sure she and her baby daughter received urgent medical and psychological attention,” he said.
Separated from ‘husband’
The official added that the teenager, who was one of 276 schoolgirls kidnapped by Boko Haram two years ago, has been “completely detached” from the man who claimed to be her husband.
He remains in military detention where he is being interrogated, the official said.
Amina was briefly reunited with her mother on Tuesday night at the family home in Mbalala before being held by the army, CNN learned.
A neighbor who witnessed the emotional meeting told CNN that her mother, Binta Ali, was very distressed when she first saw her daughter.
“The mom was very disturbed,” said the neighbor, who did not want to be named.
“She was full of happiness but at the same time seeing the situation of her daughter, who is a Christian, with a baby and a Boko Haram husband and wearing a hijab, she was just crying bitterly,” said the neighbor.
“Even Amina was comforting her mother saying she should be happy to see her alive. She was very happy to see her but she was also very sad.”
Conflicting accounts
It is still unclear how Amina escaped from the clutches of Boko Haram, but the government official said it was likely as a result of the sustained military campaign in the Sambisa Forest. The dense forest in Nigeria’s northeast is believed to be the terrorist group’s stronghold, and has long been the suspected location of the missing girls.
“The governor has ordered that no one should ask her any questions for now but it’s likely that she may have taken her chance to escape based on a military attack carried out in the Sambisa Forest,” the official said. “I believe more Chibok girls could have escaped and could still be in the Sambisa.”
On Wednesday, a member of a civilian vigilante group set up to help fight Boko Haram told CNN he had been on a nightly patrol on the edge of Sambisa Forest on Tuesday night when when the girl and some companions wandered out around 7 p.m.
He recognized her as one of the missing schoolgirls, although she looked different and was in poor physical condition, as were the baby and man with her.
Nigeria’s government has said the girl was rescued by government troops that were working with the civilian force. Operations to find the missing girls have intensified recently with a deep push into Sambisa Forest, a military spokesman told CNN’s Nima Elbagir.
Campaign of terror
The girls’ kidnapping at gunpoint from their boarding school in Chibok on April 14, 2014 sparked global outrage, including the #BringBackOurGirls campaign on social media. As many as 57 girls were able to escape almost immediately, but more than 200 remain missing.
But Nigeria’s government has so far proven largely powerless to recover the girls.
Last month, CNN obtained a video of some of the missing Chibok girls that had been sent to negotiators by their captors as “proof of life,” and showed it to some of the girls’ mothers, who had not been shown the footage by officials.
Boko Haram, based mainly in Nigeria’s northern states but responsible also for attacks in neighboring countries, is seeking to implement sharia law. According to a report released in November, the Global Terrorism Index, Boko Haram was the world’s deadliest terrorist group in 2014, responsible for 6,644 deaths, compared with ISIS, which was responsible for 6,073.
Besides the spate of kidnappings, the group has also pursued a ruthless campaign of bombing marketplaces throughout Nigeria and neighboring countries.