Boko Haram Terrorists Warn Parents: “Don’t ever put your daughters in schools again”
Boko Haram insurgents have issued an ominous warning to the parents of the Nigerian schoolgirls after releasing the girls in the town where they were abducted a month ago.
They had warned parents not to endanger the lives of their children by putting them in schools.
Eyewitnesses revealed that Boko Haram militant told people in Dapchi town when they dropped the abducted Dapchi schoolgirls that they had returned the girls “out of pity.”
“And don’t ever put your daughters in school again,” they warned.
READ ALSO: Boko Haram: Dapchi Student Narrates Her Lucky Escape From Terrorist Group
Boko Haram translates as “Western education is forbidden” in the local Hausa language.
Umar Hassan, a resident in Dapchi town, tells The Associated Press that many fled upon hearing that Boko Haram insurgents were headed into the town again.
He says that while in hiding, residents saw the missing girls getting out of the Boko Haram vehicles.
A second resident, Kachallah Musa, says the militants later left without any confrontation. It is not immediately clear how many of the girls have been freed.
It has been reported that Dapchi town is on lock down as security officials poured into the town to track down fleeing insurgents.
Residents confirmed sounds of helicopters and surveillance aircraft hovering over the city. Many are wondering why the military failed to arrest the insurgents when they came to the town with vehicles to drop the girls.
We had earlier reported that the militant used the same vehicles used in abducting the 11o schoolgirls last month in their school to drop them off at the center of Dapchi town, Yobe state, on Wednesday.
Boko Haram terrorists had on Monday, February 19, attacked the girls secondary school abducting many of the students (read here).
The skeptics are already smelling rat and calling for a thorough investigation of the security forces.
Jokers lol. Crazy country. So girls shouldn’t go to school for fear of being abducted smh.