UPDATE: Eight more girls, aged 12 to 15, were kidnapped from a village in north-east Nigeria overnight. It is suspected that Boko Haram, the group still holding over 200 girls kidnapped on 14 April, were responsible for the latest abductions.
The ABC reports that Lazarus Musa, a resident of the village of Warabe, said armed men had opened fire during the raid.
“They came in two vehicles painted in army colour. They started shooting in our village,” he said.
The gunmen reportedly took the girls away on trucks, along with looted livestock and food.
Yesterday, Mamamia wrote:
While our mainstream media was busy publishing headline after headline about the debt levy — and while the world spent tens of millions of dollars searching for a missing plane in the depths of the ocean — we, Australia, collectively failed to do something.
In fact, we failed to do anything – anything – about more than 200 innocent schoolgirls who were abducted and reportedly sold into sex slavery last month.
Each of these girls is aged between 16 and 18. Each has a family who raised her, helped with her first steps, had high hopes for her, nurtured her, sent her to a local girls’ school to prepare her for the future, and waited for her to come home after she’d sat a physics test last month.
In each case, their daughter never did make it home. Instead, each family was delivered news of the most nightmarish kind, reports that their daughter had been stolen in the middle of the night by armed men and, a few days later, whispers that she might have been sold into marriage for just $12 in one of a series of “mass weddings” held across West Africa.