freed chibok girl meets mr president
The first of the missing Nigerian schoolgirls to be safeguarded from Boko Haram activists has met President Muhammadu Buhari at his manor in Abuja.
Amina Ali Nkeki, 19, was found with an infant by an armed force sponsored vigilante bunch on Tuesday in the gigantic Sambisa Forest, near the fringe with Cameroon.
She was one of 219 understudies missing subsequent to being kidnapped from an optional school in the town of Chibok in April 2014.
Mr Buhari said he was enchanted she was back and could continue her instruction.
"Continuation of her training must be a need of government," he said, in the wake of meeting Ms Nkeki.
Mr Buhari's representative has said the young lady will likewise be reintegrated into society.
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After her getaway from Boko Haram, Ms Nkeki had a passionate get-together with her mom.
On Wednesday the 19 year old and her four-month-old child were flown by the Nigerian Air Force to Maiduguri - the capital of Borno state - before going ahead to Abuja the next day by presidential plane.
She had been held hostage for over two years by aggressors battling to build up an Islamic state.
Ms Nkeki was purportedly perceived by a contender of the regular citizen Joint Task Force (JTF), who was on watch as a feature of a vigilante bunch set up to battle Boko Haram.
She was with a suspected Boko Haram contender who is currently in the Nigerian military's care. Named as Mohammed Hayatu, he said he was Ms Nkeki's better half.
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Hosea Abana Tsambido, the administrator of the Chibok people group in Abuja, told the BBC that Ms Nkeki had been found while hunting down kindling in the timberland region encompassing the Boko Haram settlement.
"She was stating… all the Chibok young ladies are still there in the Sambisa aside from six of them that have as of now kicked the bucket."
Amid the April 2014 assault, Boko Haram shooters touched base in Chibok around evening time and attacked the school residences, stacking 276 young ladies on to trucks.
More than 50 figured out how to escape inside hours, generally by hopping off the lorries and running off into roadside brambles.
A video telecast by CNN in April this year seemed to demonstrate a portion of the abducted schoolgirls alive.
Fifteen young ladies in dark robes were imagined. They said they were being dealt with well yet needed to be with their families.
The video was purportedly shot on Christmas Day 2015 and a portion of the young ladies were recognized by their folks.
The Chibok schoolgirls, large portions of whom are Christian, had already not been seen following May 2014, when Boko Haram discharged a video of around 130 of them assembled presenting the Koran.
The snatching prompted the #BringBackOurGirls crusade, which was upheld by US First Lady Michelle Obama and Pakistani lobbyist Malala Yousafzai.
Another crusade bunch working for the young ladies' discharge, the Pathfinders Justice Initiative, said there was a "reestablished feeling of vitality and trust and energy" among groups of the young ladies after Ms Nkeki's departure.
Official executive Evon Idahosa told the BBC World Service's Newsday program that there was presently "no reason" for the Nigerian government not to venture up endeavors to free the remaining prisoners.
"They [the families] are energized however they have likewise been baffled such a great amount previously, especially amid the Jonathan organization [from 2010-2015]."
Boko Haram initially:
Established in 2002, at first centered around restricting Western-style training - Boko Haram signifies "Western instruction is illegal" in the Hausa dialect
Propelled military operations in 2009
Thousands slaughtered, for the most part in north-eastern Nigeria, and hundreds snatched
Joined supposed Islamic State, now calls itself IS's "West African area"
Seized huge territory in north-east, where it proclaimed caliphate
Local power has now retaken a large portion of that region
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