US urged to act after Boko Haram militants threaten to sell Nigeria schoolgirls as ‘slaves’
US urges action to rescue abducted schoolgirls as Boko Haram leader says he will sell them as slaves and a protest leader is arrested during a meeting with First lady Patience Jonathan
Calls for the United States to help find and free hundreds of schoolgirls kidnapped in Nigeria are mounting after Boko Haram claimed the abduction and threatened to sell the girls as “slaves”.
“I abducted your girls,” the Islamist group’s leader Abubakar Shekau said in a 57-minute video obtained by reporters on Monday, referring to the 276 students kidnapped three weeks ago from their boarding school in Chibok, northern Nigeria.
Watch: Boko Haram claims Nigerian schoolgirls' abduction
“I will repeat this: Western education should fold up. I abducted your girls. I will sell them in the market, by Allah,” Shekau said, adding that his group was holding the girls as “slaves”, in comments that stoked international outrage.
US officials said they were worried many of the students, who are aged 16 to 18, had now been smuggled across Nigeria’s borders into other countries which could complicate the so-far fruitless efforts to find them.