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Thursday, 25 September 2014
Borno sends 36 Chibok girls to International schools
granted scholarship and relocated 36
schoolgirls, who escaped abduction in
Government Secondary School, Chibok, in
Borno State, when Boko Haram insurgents
attacked the school and abducted over 200
girls on April 14.
The 36 schoolgirls, who have been admitted
into international schools in Abuja, Kaduna
and Plateau states, were part of 57 female
students, who either escaped abduction or
ran from captivity after the attack. Fifty one of
the girls were meant for admission after six
secured a scholarship to study at an
international school in Yola, Adamawa State.
The state government is spending a minimum
of N1.4 million annual fees on each of the
schoolgirls in their new schools, besides other
costs for welfare. Governor Kashim Shettima
pleaded not to disclose the names of the
schools, in order to shield them from public
distraction and to safeguard the security of
the girls and the new schools.
The governor spoke at a brief farewell held
for the girls at the Government House in
Maiduguri, on Wednesday.
Governor Shettima said he opted to spread
the girls in different schools, so as not to
make unnecessary visits that would continue
to make them subject of public focus given
the global attention on them.
Shettima said the decision to relocate the
schoolgirls was reached after psychosocial
experts, psychologists, medical doctors,
interfaith religious experts, women from civil
society organisations and other trauma
managers, who conducted trauma
management sessions for the schoolgirls at
the Government House in Maiduguri some
months back and certified the girls set for
continued education.
The governor said while it was a hard decision
to send the 36 girls back to school when their
colleagues were still in captivity, the
government had not given up on the girls still
held, just as he said no sane parent would
rule out a child in captivity.
Shettima called on the schoolgirls to be of
good behaviour, obey the rules of their new
schools, put their bitter experience behind
them and focus on their studies so as to
achieve their dreams in life.
The governor announced that any of the
schoolgirls that obtains a minimum of five
credits will be awarded automatic scholarship
throughout her university education.
Governor Shettima appealed to members of
the media not to bring to the public the new
schools the girls would be relocated to, even if
the media get to find out through
investigations.
Borno State chairman of the Christian
Association of Nigeria, Reverend Titus Pona,
who is an elder in Chibok community, was full
of praises to Governor Shettima for fulfilling
his pledge of relocating the freed schoolgirls
to international schools.
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