U.S. to Send Team to
Nigeria to Help Find Kidnapped Girls
Zeke J Miller
The Obama
administration is dispatching military officials and hostage negotiators to
Nigeria to aid in the recovery efforts of more than 250 girls kidnapped by the
militant group Boko Haram, whose leader recently boasted "I will sell them
in the market"
The U.S. is preparing to deploy a team of
military, law enforcement and hostage negotiators to Nigeria, officials said
Tuesday, to help with the ongoing effort to recover more than 250 kidnapped schoolgirls whose plight has captured global attention.
“Obviously it’s a heartbreaking situation,
outrageous situation,” President Barack Obama told ABC on Tuesday. “We’ve already
sent in a team to Nigeria — they’ve accepted our help through a combination of
military, law enforcement, and other agencies who are going in, trying to
identify where in fact these girls might be and provide them help,” he added.
Secretary of State John Kerry spoke with
Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan on Tuesday morning to discuss the plan to
send a “coordination cell” to Abuja, the Nigerian capital, to assist in
locating the girls, who were taken by the Boko Haram militant group in April.
The group’s leader recently boasted in a video that “I will sell them in the
market.”
State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the
team “could provide expertise on intelligence, investigations and hostage
negotiations, help facilitate information sharing and provide victim
assistance. It would include U.S. military personnel, law-enforcement officials
with expertise in investigations and hostage negotiations, as well as officials
with expertise in other areas that may be helpful to the Nigerian government in
its response.”
Psaki didn’t say how large the team will be,
nor would she confirm if the Nigerian government has explicitly accepted the
U.S. offer to help.
“I think [Kerry] came away from the call with
an understanding that this is something we’d work with the Nigerians to
implement,” she said.
White House press secretary Jay Carney said
President Obama and Kerry would discuss the ongoing effort to locate the girls
in their meeting Tuesday afternoon.
“We are not considering at this point military
resources,” Carney said, saying the military personnel being sent are to take
on an advisory role for the Nigerian government.
“What I can tell you is that it is certainly
Nigeria’s responsibility to maintain the safety and security of its citizens,”
Carney added.
Zeke J Miller, TIME, May 7, 2014
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