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When will Leah Sharibu regain freedom?

Leah Sharibu will turn 17. By that day, she will also have gone deeper into her third year as a captive in Boko Haram’s custody, ministering to the needs of the terrorists in an unfamiliar desert terrain.
Leah was one of the 110 schoolgirls aged 11–19 years kidnapped by the Boko Haram terrorist group from the Government Girls’ Science and Technical College (GGSTC) in Dapchi on February 19, 2018.
Dapchi is located in Bulabulin, Yunusari Local Government area of Yobe State, in the northeast part of Nigeria. It lies approximately 275 km (170 miles) northwest of Chibok, where over 276 schoolgirls were kidnapped by Boko Haram in 2014.
The terrorists who kidnapped the school girls struck at about 5:30pm on the day, hours after the Governor of Yobe State, Ibrahim Geidam, complained about the withdrawal of army troops from Dapchi without informing either the local police or the state government in advance.
But the Federal Government had, pronto, deployed the Nigerian Air Force and other security agencies to search for the missing schoolgirls and return them to their parents.
The search effort yielded no fruit until March 21, 2018 when the Federal government of Nigeria announced that Boko Haram terrorists had returned 106 of the kidnapped children, including 104 girls who went to school, one girl who did not and a boy. 
Unfortunately, Leah Sharibu was not released.
The terror group dropped them off in the town in nine vehicles.
Information Minister, Lai Mohammed, stated that the release was unconditional.
But days later, the United Nation stated in its report that the government had paid a huge ransom for the release.
The fighters after releasing the girls warned their parents not to put them in school again
Some of the kidnapped girls stated that five of the schoolgirls had died on the same day they were kidnapped by the terrorist group.
Leah Sharibu, a Christian schoolgirl aged 14 at the time of her capture, is the only remaining Dapchi schoolgirl still held hostage.
Although no one is certain of Leah’s condition after her colleagues were released, an audio was however released of Leah in August 2018, pleading for her freedom. Also, in October 2018, her parents revealed that Boko Haram had threatened to kill her later that month, should the government not meet their demands. In February 2019, there were social media reports about her death, but were dismissed by the government as politically motivated disinformation.
Contrary to her death rumour in 2019, it was widely reported in January 2020, that Leah had given birth to a baby boy after she was forcefully converted to Islam and married off to a Boko haram commander.
We note with worry that Leah is on her third year in the abode of her captors without any hope of her returning home soon in spite assurances by the Federal Government that she would be released.
Section 14 (2) (b) of the 1999 Constitution (As Amended) provides that “the security and welfare of the people shall be the primary purpose of government.”
We make bold to say that the core responsibility of the state to every citizen is the safety it provides over life and property and that the government owes Leah the responsibility of reuniting her with her family.
We urge the Federal Government to do everything that is necessary and possible to ensure Leah regains her freedom from the abode of the terror group. Leah Sharibu must be reunited with her family without further delays. 

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