Lai Mohammed, the minister of information and culture, has said that the federal government did not pay €2m ransom to secure the release of 82 Chibok girls.
A BBC report had recently quoted a
source as saying that €2m was paid to the Boko Haram insurgent group
during the course of negotiation.
“Paying a ransom as well as swapping
prisoners was a sticking point that almost unravelled the whole deal,”
said the source. “It should have happened sooner, but the president was
hesitating about freeing the five – and especially about the money.”
But Mohammed told PUNCH on Saturday that only five Boko Haram commanders were exchanged for the Chibok girls.
His denial came on a day when 82 Chibok
girls were reunited with their parents and 21 of their colleagues who
were freed in October 2016.
The minister said: “I emphatically deny
on behalf of the Federal Government that any form of ransom was paid in
exchange for the release of the 82 Chibok girls.
“Apart from the five Boko Haram
commanders, the exchange of which we had already made public, no other
concession was made. Any other thing to the contrary is absolutely
false.”
Out of the 276 girls abducted in April 2014 from their school in Chibok, Borno state, 113 girls are yet to be released.
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