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21 Girls Abducted By Boko Haram Islamists Reunited With Families

These girls are among the over 200 missing Chibok schoolgirls being held by the Islamists in Nigeria.

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Twenty-one of the over 200 missing Chibok schoolgirls freed after being held by Nigeria’s Boko Haram Islamists for more than two years have spoken of their ordeal as they were reunited with their families.

During a Christian ceremony held for them in the capital Abuja on Sunday, a schoolgirl named Gloria Dame said they had survived for 40 days without food and narrowly escaped death at least once.

“I was... (in) the woods when the plane dropped a bomb near me but I wasn’t hurt,” Dame told the congregation. “We had no food for one month and 10 days but we did not die. We thank God,” she said, speaking in the local Hausa language.
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The ceremony was organised by Nigeria's security services which negotiated their release. Most of the kidnapped students were Christian but had been forcibly converted to Islam during captivity.

The Chibok girls were abducted in April 2014, drawing global attention to the Boko Haram insurgency engulfing the area when US First Lady Michelle Obama joined the #BringBackOurGirls online movement.

Of the 276 girls initially seized, scores escaped in the hours after the kidnapping, while another 19-year-old was found with her four-month-old baby earlier this year.

The ceremony was interrupted when the girls’ relatives arrived and were reunited with them. Tears flowed as they hugged their children.

“We can all see the joy and emotions of the parents,” Information Minister Lai Mohamed said.

He said talks with the Islamists would continue “until all the girls have been released”.

“Very soon, another batch, bigger than this would be released,” Mohammed said.

Despite winning back swathes of territory from the jihadists, Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari had faced intense criticism for failing to recover the young captives, who became the defining symbol of Boko Haram's brutal campaign to establish a fundamentalist Islamic state in the country.

The insurgency has claimed more than 20,000 lives and displaced 2.6 million people from their homes since Boko Haram took up arms against the Nigerian government in 2009.

(At The Quint, we are answerable only to our audience. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member. Because the truth is worth it.)

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