Boko Haram
video emerged Monday purportedly showing some of the kidnapped Nigerian
girls in Muslim headdresses and the terror group's leader declaring
they have converted to Islam.
The video, released by French news agency Agence France-Presse, was shot in a nondescript bush area and showed about 100 girls.
In the 27-minute footage, the terror group's leader, Abubakar Shekau, says he is willing to exchange the schoolgirls for Boko Haram prisoners.
It shows girls dressed in
black and gray hijabs, and reciting the Quran as they make Islamic
declarations of faith. Shekau appears in a separate part of the video,
but never with the girls.
Praise be to Allah, the lord of the world," the girls in the video chant.
It's the first purported
sighting of the girls abducted last month in the northern town of
Chibok. A convoy of Islamist militants drove to a school, seized nearly
300 girls and fled into the night.
At least 276 girls remain
missing since the terror group abducted them on April 14. Though some
of the girls escaped shortly after their abduction, none of the others
have been found.
A daring escape
One of the escapees told
CNN's Nima Elbagir how she made a dash for freedom after militants
loaded them into trucks and drove them into the nearby Sambisa Forest.
"We ran into the bush,"
she said of her escape with two others. "We ran and we ran." Lost and
terrified, she said, they later ran toward flames they presumed were
rising from a building set ablaze by the militants in their hometown.
The escapees were lucky. The missing girls probably have been separated and taken out of the country by now, officials say.
"The search must be in
Niger, Cameroon and Chad, to see if we can find information," said
Gordon Brown, a former UK prime minister and the U.N.'s special envoy
for global education.
But President Goodluck
Jonathan says he believes the girls are still in the forest where the
militants disappeared shortly after their capture.
More details on what happened that night
A CNN team made the dangerous journey to Chibok to gather firsthand accounts of the abduction.
Before the gun-wielding
Islamist militants rode into town, residents said they got cell phone
calls that the feared extremist group was on the way. Family and friends
from surrounding villages told them of a convoy of cargo trucks,
pickups and motorcycles. But no one knew what the attack would entail.
Residents said they
passed along warnings to local authorities that the terrorists were on
their way that night. Police called for reinforcements, but none came.
Everyone, including police, fled into the bush. But the girls remained
asleep in their dorms.
Global search effort
The international effort to find them is gaining steam -- albeit a few weeks too late.
U.S. and British
officials are in the capital of Abuja to help look for the girls, plan
rescue missions and advise on ways to quash the terror group.
China and France are
also helping in the search. In addition, Israel plans to send a team of
counterterrorism experts to help, Jonathan's office said Sunday.
The nations involved
have not provided specifics on what their missions will entail, but the
United States has said it has no plans to send combat troops.
Why did help arrive so late?
The United States
offered assistance immediately after the mass abduction, but Nigeria
turned it down until it became apparent that the situation needed a
greater response, senior U.S. State Department officials told CNN.
They echo comments made last week by Secretary of State John Kerry, who said that the U.S. has been engaged since day one.
An explosive report
Friday accused military commanders of knowing the terror group was
headed to the school at least four hours in advance. However, the report
said, they were unable to raise enough troops to respond.
The findings by human
rights group Amnesty International mirror accounts by various parents
and villagers, who described to CNN an ineffective military response in
the days and weeks after the girls were abducted.
Nigeria's information and defense ministries disputed the report.
The moment the Nigerian government heard of the abduction, "we went in to action," Information Minister Labaran Maku said.
"We shouldn't turn this into a trial of the Nigerian government."
Source: Nigeria abducted girls
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