Parents and relatives gather for prayers at the Chibok school where hundreds of schoolgirls were abducted by Boko Haram jihadists seven years ago.
Several more mass kidnappings of schoolchildren have occurred in northern Nigeria since Chibok, resulting in hundreds of schools being shut in a region where the literacy rate and school enrolment are already very low.
Why kidnappings are becoming increasingly frequent in Nigeria ? https://t.co/I3zxDEuSri
— africanews ???? (@africanews) February 17, 2021
It's 7 Years Today.
112 of our #ChibokGirls are still in captivity.
— #BringBackOurGirls (@BBOG_Nigeria) April 14, 2021
Until all the abducted girls can be accounted for, the promise of Nigeria’s constitution, that the welfare of Nigerians shall be the primary purpose of government, will continue to ring hollow.#7YearsTooLong pic.twitter.com/deu4QDYlTd
One 16-year-old schoolgirl told Amnesty: "Since many of my friends were kidnapped in school, my parents decided to give me out in marriage for my own safety."
The UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) estimates that about 10.5 million children between the ages of five and 14 are out of school in Nigeria.
"The Nigerian authorities’ failure to protect schoolchildren from recent attacks clearly shows that no lessons have been learned from the Chibok tragedy," Ojigho said.
"The Nigerian authorities risk a lost generation."