May 13, 2014 -- Updated 2121 GMT (0521 HKT)
The local governor says
they're all from the Chibok boarding school raided by Boko Haram
militants April 14. But some relatives say they don't see their
daughters in the video, and believe some of the girls were taken in
earlier abductions.
A spokesman for the Borno
governor said parents, students and teachers have now identified 77 of
the girls shown in the video, released Monday by Agence France-Presse, a
French news agency.
"Remember, I also said
that on face value, all the girls in the video are believed to part of
the abducted girls, but Governor (Kashim) Shettima has insisted that the
names of all the girls in the video be established and compared with
school and security records," spokesman Isa Gusau said Tuesday.
"The comparison will be
done tomorrow as (the) identification exercise continues through the
night until every person in that video is named," said Gusau.
Earlier, Shettima had
said that relatives had identified just 54 of the girls. Shettima said
he met with families of the kidnapped girls earlier Tuesday in Borno
state's capital, Maiduguri, at which time the families identified some
of their girls.
Shettima said the others also attended the school, but he did not explain how he knew that.
CNN has not yet received confirmation from any parents that their daughters were among the girls shown in the video.
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Some relatives also told
CNN that more than 50 parents of girls abducted last month watched the
videos in the Mbalala district and also in Chibok, and didn't see any of
their daughters in the crowd.
That's not necessarily surprising -- the video shows about 100 girls, not the full 276 abducted from Chibok by Boko Haram.
But the relatives
interviewed by CNN -- an uncle of one of the girls who escaped and the
parents of two missing girls -- said they believe the video also shows
some girls abducted as much as two years ago.
The confusion is
significant because the video had been hailed as proof that at least
some girls in the Chibok abduction -- the object of international search
efforts -- were alive and well. Such proof would be a crucial part of
any possible negotiations that could lead to the release of the girls.
"I think we've got to be
realistic," CNN analyst Frances Townsend said Tuesday on "New Day."
"Even in a negotiation, because of the large number of captives, you are
unlikely to return all approximately 300 girls to their families and
reunite them healthy, safe and well."
Negotiate or fight?
Shehu Sani, a former
negotiator between Boko Haram and the government, has called for
Nigerian authorities to negotiate with the girls' Islamist captors, and
he said they may have to embrace the unpalatable option of a prisoner
swap.
"There are two ways to which you can get these girls free," Sani told CNN's "Connect the World" show.
"The first is to use
force, and the second is through dialogue. The use of force is not an
option for now in the sense that nobody knows where these girls were
kept.
"And even if you know,
these girls have been embedded in with the insurgents who are heavily
armed. And any attempt to rescue them will be putting their lives in
further danger."
The director of a
Nigerian government information ministry, the National Orientation
Agency, said all options, including negotiations, are under
consideration.
Map: Nima Elbagir's route to Chibok
New video allegedly shows Nigerian girls
New video allegedly shows Nigerian girls
Nigerian girl escapes from Boko Haram
The Nigerian government
has negotiated with Boko Haram for the release of kidnapped girls
before, CNN terrorism analyst Paul Cruickshank said.
Last year, the militant
group won the release of some 100 of its imprisoned members after
reaching an agreement to return about a dozen kidnapped girls,
Cruickshank said.
Girls' lives 'more important'
Cruickshank warned that
dealing with Boko Haram will just invite more such abductions, but Sani,
a human rights activist in northern Nigeria, said authorities have
little choice.
"I believe that the
lives of these girls is more important to us than the insurgents that
have been in detention. And we have nothing to lose if we send the
insurgents and we can swap them with these girls back," he said.
The man purporting to be Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau appeared to open the door to such a resolution.
"By Allah, these girls will not leave our hands until you release our brothers in your prison," he said.
If not, they'll be sold as slaves, he said.
Rights groups have
accused Nigeria of using heavy-handed tactics such as illegal searches,
torture and extrajudicial killings to crack down on the militants.
Military response to allegations
Amnesty International
said last week that Nigerian military commanders failed to act on
advance warnings about the terror group's raid on the school.
On Tuesday, Maj. Gen.
Chris Olukolade, a spokesman for the Nigerian military, said authorities
often are warned of likely attacks on towns and villages.
"In a day, you can have
up to 1,000 of such claims. More than three quarters of it turns out to
be frivolous," he said, stressing that no warning has ever been ignored.
"In the case of Chibok,
the first one that was taken to be credible was one that came for our
troops on patrol who (were) noticing what was going on and observing
that it was getting much beyond their level (and) sent for
reinforcement," the spokesman said.
Olukolade also addressed
why some people in Chibok, feeling abandoned by the government, have
taken security into their own hands and started night patrols.
"One element in this
operation has been to cooperate with the locals," said Olukolade,
defending the military against those who say it's not doing enough.
International assistance
U.S. and British officials are working with the Nigerian government to gather intelligence and decide what to do next.
The United States is
flying manned military surveillance flights over Nigeria in the hunt for
the girls and their captors, Pentagon spokesman Col. Steve Warren told
reporters Tuesday.
It is also sharing commercial satellite images with Nigeria, two senior Obama administration officials told CNN's Elise Labott.
China and France are
helping in the search as well. Israel plans to send a team of
counterterrorism experts to help, Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan's
office said this week.
Stephanie Busari and Lillian Leposo reported
from Abuja. Laura Smith-Spark reported and wrote from London. CNN's
Antonia Mortensen and Isha Sesay contributed from Abuja; Faith Karimi
contributed from Atlanta, and Nima Elbagir contributed from Chibok.
Journalist Aminu Abubakar also contributed to this report.
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