The United
States of America (USA) is prepared to help Nigeria in searching for the
more than 200 girls abducted by the Islamist sect, Boko Haram, from
Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State.
“We have been engaged with the Nigerian
government in discussions on what we might do to help support their
efforts to find and free these young women,” State Department
spokeswoman Marie Harf told reporters on Thursday.
“We will continue to have those discussions and help in any way we can.”
The terrorists stormed the school on
April 14, packed the teenagers onto trucks and motorcycles before
disappearing into a remote area along the border with Cameroon.
The kidnapping occurred the same day a
bomb blast, also blamed on Boko Haram, killed 75 people on the edge of
the capital, Abuja, and it marked the first attack on the capital in two
years.
The brutality of the abduction has
shocked Nigerians long accustomed to hearing about atrocities in an
increasingly bloody five-year-old insurgency especially in the
Northeast. Boko Haram is now seen as the main security threat to
Africa’s leading energy producer.
Harf did not elaborate on the kind of
assistance Washington is offering, but said: “We know Boko Haram is
active in the area and we have worked very closely with the Nigerian
government to build their capacity to fight this threat.”
Separately, a group of U.S. senators
introduced a resolution condemning the abduction and urging U.S.
government assistance in the rescue effort.
“The U.S. and the international
community must work with the Nigerian government to ensure these girls
are reunited with their families and deepen efforts to combat the
growing threat posed by Boko Haram,” said Senator Chris Coons of
Delaware, the chairman of the Senate’s African Affairs subcommittee, and
one of the resolution’s six sponsors.
In fiscal year 2012, the United States
provided over $20 million in security assistance to Nigeria, part of
that to build the country’s military, boost its capacity to investigate
terrorist attacks and enhance the government’s forensic capabilities,
she said.
The US Embassy yesterday condemned Thursday’s explosion in Nyanya near Abuja.
Death toll in the blasts rose to 19 yesterday, according to the Police.
Sixteen were injured.
The embassy, in a statement in Abuja, said the attack was “ not only on innocent people but on a democratic nation itself.”
Lawless violence and intimidation, it declared, have no place in a democracy.
It said its thoughts “are with the families and loved ones of those who were killed or injured in this heinous act.”
It pledged its continued support for the government and Nigerians “as they face the threat of violent extremism.”
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