Nigerian authorities offered a reward of about $310,000
Wednesday for information leading to the rescue of 276 schoolgirls abducted last month by the terror group Boko Haram.
The reward offer came the
same day reports emerged of a Boko Haram attack Monday in the town of
Gamboru Ngala, near the border with Cameroon. At least 150 people died,
according to a Nigerian Senator and several eyewitnesses.
It also comes as U.S.
officials are preparing to send law enforcement and military assistance
to help find the girls, who were abducted on April 14.
"While calling on the
general public to be part of the solution to the present security
challenge, the Police High Command also reassures all citizens that any
information given would be treated anonymously and with utmost
confidentiality," the Nigeria Police Force said in a statement.
President Goodluck
Jonathan has come under fire after waiting three weeks to publicly
acknowledge the kidnappings in northern Nigeria, where Boko Haram is
rampant.
His administration, however, is defending its response -- even as details emerged Tuesday about a second mass kidnapping.
"The President and the
government (are) not taking this as easy as people all over the world
think," said presidential spokesman Doyin Okupe.
"We've done a lot, but we
are not talking about it. We're not Americans. We're not showing
people, you know, but it does not mean that we are not doing something,"
Okupe siad.
The presidential
spokesman said helicopters and planes have searched for the girls in 250
locations. More troops, he said, are on the way.
U.S. aid accepted
Nigeria's President also accepted an offer of U.S. military support in the search for the girls.
"So what we've done is we have offered -- and it's been accepted -- help from our military and our law enforcement officials," U.S. President Barack Obama told NBC News on Tuesday. "We're going to do everything we can to provide assistance to them."
That help includes the
creation of a "coordination cell" to provide intelligence,
investigations and hostage negotiation expertise, U.S. State Department
spokeswoman Jen Psaki said. The cell will include U.S. military
personnel, she said.
The joint coordination
cell will be established at the U.S. Embassy in the capital of Abuja,
and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said the work is expected to
begin immediately.
The Pentagon has started
planning for how it can help Nigeria, a senior U.S. military official
told CNN. U.S. military assistance will likely be limited to
intelligence, mission planning and hostage negotiations, several
officials told CNN. It's unlikely at this point that U.S. troops would
be involved in operations, the officials said.
Despite the flurry of
activity, the father of two of the schoolgirls taken by Boko Haram
scoffed at the Nigerian government's response.
"We have never seen any
military man there," said the father, who is not being identified for
fear of reprisals by the government or Boko Haram.
"Had it been military men who went into the bush to rescue our daughters, we would have seen them."
Source:CNN

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