secure the release of the Dapchi girls.
In a statement issued in Ilorin, Kwara State, on Thursday, the Minister of
Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, challenged anyone who has
any evidence of payment to publish such
”It is not enough to say that Nigeria paid a ransom, little or huge.
There must be a conclusive evidence to support such claim. Without that,
the claim remains what it is: a mere conjecture,” the Minister said.
Mohammed had in March said the girls were released unconditionally with no
money paid.
“It is not true that we paid ransom for the release of the Dapchi girls,
neither was there a prisoner swap to secure their release,” Mohammed had
said.
“What happened was that the abduction itself was a breach of the ceasefire
talks between the insurgents and the government; hence it became a moral
burden on the abductors. Any report that we paid ransom or engaged in
prisoner swap is false.”

