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Chibok schoolgirls who escaped Boko Haram now say they feel abandoned with few chances for further education

Although most of the 106 who have been found or freed are now studying at a private American university, there remain a handful who missed out

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Women chant slogans calling for the release of the remaining 112 out of 219 kidnapped Chibok schoolgirls. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

On April 14, 2014, Saraya Amos and 56 of her classmates staged a daring escape from Boko Haram jihadists who raided their secondary school in Chibok, northeast Nigeria.

Unlike the 219 girls who were spirited away in a convoy of trucks into the darkness, most of them not to be seen again for several years, the 57 were considered the lucky ones.

But as Nigeria on Saturday marks the fourth anniversary of the mass abduction that captured world attention, some of the ones that got away are unhappy and feel abandoned.

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Most of the 106 who have been found or freed as a result of government negotiations with Boko Haram are now studying at the private American University of Nigeria in Yola, Adamawa state.

“We deserve equal treatment and opportunity,” said Amos, who still lives with her parents in Chibok and helps on the family farm. “Those rescued are now studying at the university while we have been forgotten.”

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