The escapee schoolgirl, who disclosed this in Maiduguri when
she and 27 other of the girls who had been abducted were brought to Government
House, Maiduguri to meet with the state governor, said she doubted whether the
over 200 of her schoolmates still in captivity were comfortable there. The young girl, who begged not to be named in the print,
said she ran for nearly two days to get home.
forest with short trees and shrubs everywhere. There is no
single building or house there, but there are tents made from plastic sheets in
some places. I don’t know if that is where they call Sambisa. Some of the areas
are thick and dark; some places have pools of water,” the 20-year-old
schoolgirl said.
She added, “On the day we arrived there we were given food,
but some of us did not eat and they warned us that we should better eat,
because we would spend a long time with them there and that they did not intend
to harm us, but to make us good Muslim women.
“I was scared of eating the rice that we were given to eat,
but I drank the can of Malt drink. It was when they asked us to go fetch water
the next day that I and other girls summoned the courage to escape. We ran all
day; we kept on running until we got to some place where we were assisted by
villagers to get home,” she said.
Explaining how they were taken into the forest, the girl
said there was no visible road leading to it.
“They kept on driving through the bush. You can’t see any
visible route ahead, but the men just tore through the forest, avoiding trees
and thick shrubs. Even when their vehicle tyres burst they didn’t stop; they
continued to drive and if they came across any vehicle, they would forcefully
take over the vehicle or seize the tyre, fix it and continue to move until we
got to the place where they said we had arrived.”

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