Malala Yousafzai, the well-known Pakistani
activist, met with Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan on Monday to
discuss the plight of more than 200 kidnapped girls.
Boko Haram, the extremist group that kidnapped hundreds of Nigerian
schoolgirls last April, has released a new video mocking international
calls for the girls' release.
The video was seen as a snub of
Malala Yousafzai, the Pakistani activist who gained prominence after
being shot in 2012 by the Pakistani Taliban for campaigning for girls'
education. She met with Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan on Monday
to discuss the plight of the missing girls.
In the , obtained
by Agence France-Presse, militant leader Abubaker Shelam stands in front
of tanks and masked, armed men and chants, "Bring back our army,"
ridiculing the social media slogan "bring back our girls."
Malala, who turned 17 on Saturday — her birthday is
annually by the United Nations as Malala Day — arrived in Nigeria over
the weekend. She drew a direct parallel between her situation and that
of the abducted girls in terms of violent resistance to the education of
women.
"When I heard about the Nigerian girls, that they are being abducted, I felt that my sisters were in prison," Malala . "This is my feeling, that if we remain silent, then this will spread, this will happen more and more and more."
As we
last week, more than 60 women and girls who had been abducted by
Nigerian extremist group Boko Haram escaped to freedom, after their
captors left for a raid. More than 200 schoolgirls abducted from their
school in the town of Chibok in April remain missing.
Malala met with five of the girls who escaped. They told her that they had not been debriefed by government investigators, to the BBC.
That
may increase pressure on Nigerian officials to step up their efforts.
Jonathan promised Malala he would finally meet with some of the families
of the missing girls.
"The great challenge in rescuing the
Chibok girls is the need to ensure that they are rescued alive,"
Jonathan said in a statement.
"Western diplomats said that
despite the huge international publicity that the social media campaign
has generated, the efforts to find the hostages were little further on
than they were back in May, when Britain, America and France began to
help," the British
Telegraph . "With neither a prisoner swap or
a rescue considered likely, they said there was little real prospect of
any 'breakthrough' in the case in the foreseeable future."
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