The first Nigerian schoolgirl from Chibok to be rescued from boko Haram says she misses the father of her baby, a suspected Islamist militant.
In her first interview since being found with her baby in may, Amina Ali Nkeki told reuters she also wanted to go home to Chibok a town in the north.
She and her child are being held in the capital, Abuja, for what the government of Nigeria calls a restoration process.
More than 200 girls were kidnapped from a school in Chibok North-east Nigeria in April 2014. The abduction led to the #bringbackourgirls campaign, that was supported by United States first lady Michelle Obama and Pakistani activist malala yousafzai.
The boko Haram group has wage a violent insurgency for several years in North-east Nigeria in its quest for Islamic rule.
In her first interview since being found with her baby in may, Amina Ali Nkeki told reuters she also wanted to go home to Chibok a town in the north.
She and her child are being held in the capital, Abuja, for what the government of Nigeria calls a restoration process.
More than 200 girls were kidnapped from a school in Chibok North-east Nigeria in April 2014. The abduction led to the #bringbackourgirls campaign, that was supported by United States first lady Michelle Obama and Pakistani activist malala yousafzai.
The boko Haram group has wage a violent insurgency for several years in North-east Nigeria in its quest for Islamic rule.
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