People who
have spoken to the freed girls say they have stories the government does not
want told, reports Associated Press.
Amina Ali
Nkeki was found wandering in a forest, the first of the nearly 300 Chibok
schoolgirls kidnapped by Boko Haram to escape on her own and reach freedom,
that was in May.
Since then she
has been sequestered by Nigeria's intelligence agency, embraced just once by
her family months ago. Some say Nigeria's government is keeping the young woman
silent because it doesn't want her telling the world about military blunders in
the fight against the Islamic extremist group, or about her desire to be
reunited with the father of her child, a detained former Boko Haram commander
"I worry,
sometimes, that I don't know if she is alive or dead," her mother, Binta
Ali Nkeki, sobbed during an exclusive telephone interview with The Associated
Press from her remote northeastern village of Mbalala.
She said she
hasn't seen her daughter since July.
Read more here: https://apnews.com/a9be47aa078241c8b69952dfda685774
Read more here: https://apnews.com/a9be47aa078241c8b69952dfda685774
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