Washington (AFP) – The United States expressed skepticism Tuesday that
more than 200 schoolgirls held by Boko Haram militants had been located by
Nigeria, stating that it had no “independent information” on the matter.
The country’s highest ranking military officer on Monday said that Nigeria
had located the missing teenagers, kidnapped mid-April by the armed
militant group.
But one day later, US State Department Spokeswoman Jen Psaki told
journalists that the there was no “independent information from the United
States to support these reports.”
Asked whether she found it “smart” of Nigerian officials to announce they
had found the girls — in the event that they had been located — Psaki
responded that “for the girls’ safety and wellbeing, we certainly would
not discuss publicly this sort of information.”
With 80 US military personnel sent to neighboring Chad for intelligence,
surveillance and reconnaissance, the United States is the biggest foreign
participant in the effort against Boko Haram.
Washington has also deployed surveillance drones, spy planes and about 30
civilian and military specialists to support Nigeria’s security forces.
US authorities have previously expressed doubt that Abuja has the capacity
to conduct the rescue mission.
State Department and Pentagon officials as well as members of Congress
have chided Nigeria for what they called a slow response to the crisis and
for human rights violations of which its army is accused.