Events in 2014 The overwhelming majority of the kidnapped girls who were Christian were
forced to convert to Islam. The girls were
forced into marriage with members of Boko Haram, with a reputed
bride price of
₦2,000 each (
$6/
£4). Sightings of the students were reported by villagers living in the
Sambisa Forest, considered a refuge for Boko Haram. Others reported seeing the students crossing into the neighbouring countries of
Chad and
Cameroon with the militants, though
Kashim Shettima, the governor of
Borno State in Nigeria, said on 11 May that he had sighted the abducted girls and claimed that they had not been taken across the borders into either country. The Nigerian Military enlisted help from local volunteers and
vigilantes in order to search forests close to Nigeria's borders by 21 April. Nigerian president
Goodluck Jonathan spoke publicly about the kidnapping for the first time on 4 May, saying the government was doing everything it could to find the missing girls. Sir
Andrew Pocock, British
High Commissioner to Nigeria at the time of the kidnapping, said that a couple of months after the kidnapping, a group of up to 80 of the Chibok girls were seen by American "eye in the sky" technology but nothing was done. About 80 girls, a camp and evidence of vehicle movement were spotted next to a local landmark called the "Tree of Life" in the Sambisa forest. Shekau claimed that "Allah instructed me to sell them... I will carry out his instructions", and that "
Slavery is allowed in my religion, and I shall capture people and make them
slaves." He said the girls should not have been in school and instead should have been married since girls as young as nine are suitable for marriage. In this video, Shekau acknowledged that many of the girls were not Muslims, but that some had converted to Islam and that they would "treat them well the way the
Prophet Muhammad treated the infidels he seized". The next day, Boko Haram militants abducted 8 girls aged between 12 and 15 from northeastern Nigeria. In the night of 13 to 14 May, Boko Haram
ambushed a military convoy that was searching for the abductees near Chibok, killing twelve soldiers and wounding several others. The incident led to mutiny of government forces at
Maiduguri, reducing the ability of the Nigerian Army to rescue the schoolgirls. Between 20 and 23 June 91 women and children were
abducted in other areas of Borno State by Boko Haram militants, with an estimated 600 girls held by Boko Haram in three camps outside Nigeria by this stage. Boko Haram once again attacked Chibok and other nearby villages on 22 July, killing at least 51 people, including 11 parents of the abducted girls. A journalist-brokered deal to secure the release of the girls in exchange for 100 Boko Haram prisoners held in Nigerian jails was scrapped at a late stage on 24 May after President Goodluck Jonathan consulted with U.S., Israeli, French and British foreign ministers in Paris, where the consensus was that no deals should be struck with terrorists, and that a solution involving force was required. On 26 May, the Nigerian Chief of Defence Staff announced that the Nigerian security forces had located the kidnapped girls, but ruled out a forceful rescue attempt for fears of collateral damage. Two of the kidnapped girls were found raped, "half-dead", and tied to a tree on 30 May by a civilian militia in the Baale region of Northeastern Nigeria. Villagers said that Boko Haram had left the two girls and had killed four other disobedient girls and buried them. It was reported on 26 June that the Nigerian government had signed a contract worth more than $1.2 million with Levick, a
Washington, D.C. public relations firm to work on "the international and local media narrative" surrounding the Chibok schoolgirl kidnapping. The contract was labeled a waste of money by President Jonathan's critics. Jonathan was criticized for a lack of communication regarding the kidnapping. Via an opinion column in
The Washington Post, Jonathan attributed his silence to a desire not to compromise the details of security efforts being carried out to rescue the girls. On 1 July, a businessman suspected of carrying out the kidnappings of the school girls, as well as the bombing of a busy market in northeastern Nigeria, was arrested. Military sources said that he was also accused of helping the Islamist militant group kill the traditional leader
Idrissa Timta, the Emir of Gwoza. Two weeks later, Zakaria Mohammed, a high-ranking member of
Boko Haram, was arrested at Darazo-Basrika Road while fleeing from counterinsurgency operations around the Balmo Forest.
Events in 2015 Stephen Davis, a former
Anglican clergyman, contacted three Boko Haram commanders who said they might be prepared to release Chibok schoolgirls and went to Nigeria in April 2015. He was given proof of life (a video of them being raped) and was told 18 were seriously ill, some with
HIV. Davis got initial agreement that Boko Haram would release these ill girls. However, after three attempts the deal fell through when another group abducted the girls believing they could make money out of them and Davis left Nigeria. By May, the Nigerian military had reclaimed most of the areas previously controlled by Boko Haram in Nigeria including many of the camps in the Sambisa forest where it was suspected the Chibok girls had been kept. Although many women previously held captive by Boko Haram had been freed as the Nigerian military reclaimed these areas, none of the Chibok girls were found. President
Muhammadu Buhari, who gained power through the
2015 Nigerian general election, stated in December that he was willing to negotiate with Boko Haram for the release of the Chibok girls without any preconditions. Acting director of defence information, Col. Rabe Abubakar, stated that the Nigerian armed forces would "not rush" to rescue the remaining girls. He justified this by claiming that rescue operations required "diligent intervention and a high-level operation".
Events in 2016 The Nigerian military freed 1,000 women and girls held captive in the village of Boboshe by Boko Haram in January, but none of them were Chibok girls. The video was reportedly taken in December 2015, and the girls seemed to show no signs of distress, though it is possible that the militants selected the girls on the video specifically to give the impression all the Chibok girls were in good health. Chibok schoolgirl
Amina Ali Nkeki was found on 17 May by the vigilante
Civilian Joint Task Force group in the Sambisa Forest, along with her baby and Mohammad Hayyatu, a suspected Boko Haram militant who claimed to be her husband. All three were suffering from severe malnutrition when they were found. She met Nigerian President
Muhammadu Buhari on 19 May. Government officials announced the same day that the Nigerian army and vigilante groups had killed 35 Boko Haram militants, freed 97 women and children and claimed one of the women was a Chibok schoolgirl. However, there were doubts that this girl, Serah Luka, was really one of the kidnapped Chibok schoolgirls. On 21 May 2016, Amir Muhammad Abdullahi, who claimed to be the Boko Haram second in command and speaker for several senior militants, offered to surrender so long as they would not be harmed, and in return they would release hostages, including the Chibok girls. However, when talking about the Chibok girls, he said that "...frankly, just about a third of them remain, as the rest have been martyred". In August the Nigerian military announced they had launched an air attack on Boko Haram's headquarters in the Sambisa Forest, claiming to have killed several commanders and seriously wounded the leader Abubakar Shekau. Later reports suggested the attack also killed 10 of the Chibok girls and wounded 30 others. Later in the month Boko Haram released a video of what appeared to be about 50 Chibok girls, some holding babies, with an armed masked spokesman who demanded the release of jailed fighters in exchange for the girls' freedom. The masked gunman said some of the Chibok girls had been killed by Nigerian air strikes and 40 had been married. The film was apparently released on the orders of
Abubakar Shekau, the leader of one of the factions of Boko Haram. 21 of the Chibok schoolgirls were released in October by Boko Haram after negotiations between the group and the Nigerian government, brokered by
International Committee of the Red Cross and the
Swiss government. A child born to one of the girls and believed by medical personnel to be about 20 months old also was released. On 16 October, President Buhari's spokesperson stated that the ISIL-allied faction of Boko Haram was willing to negotiate the release of 83 more of the girls. According to him, the splinter group had stated that the rest of the girls were under the control of Shekau-led faction. Two days later, Pogu Bitrus, the chairman of the Chibok Development Association, claimed that more than 100 of the missing girls apparently did not want to return home because they had either been brainwashed or were fearful of the stigma they would receive. Another girl named Maryam Ali Maiyanga was found along with a baby and rescued by the Nigerian Army on 5 November. The spokesman for the army, Sani Usman, said that she was found in Pulka,
Borno State whilst screening escapees from Boko Haram's Sambisa forest base. She was confirmed to be one of those kidnapped at Chibok by Bring Back Our Girls.
Events in 2017 ,
Ivanka Trump, and Chibok schoolgirls Joy Bishara and Lydia Pogu at the
White House on 27 June 2017.|alt=A picture of US President Donald Trump meeting two of the Chibok schoolgirls in June 2017 One of the kidnapped girls, Rakiya Abubakar, was reported on 5 January to have been found by the Nigerian Army along with a 6-month-old baby while they were interrogating suspects detained in army raids on the Sambisa forest. Her identity was later confirmed by Bring Back Our Girls group. 82 further schoolgirls were released on 6 May following successful negotiations between the Nigerian government and Boko Haram, involving the exchange of five Boko Haram leaders. The negotiations were carried out by Mustapha Zanna, barrister and owner of an orphanage in Maiduguri. The deal also involved the intervention of the human security division of Swiss government's foreign ministry A Nigerian government spokesman stated that though 83 girls were originally to be released in May 2017, one of them chose to stay with her husband instead of being freed. U.S. President
Donald Trump met Chibok schoolgirls Joy Bishara and Lydia Pogu at the
White House on 27 June, who were due to start education at
Southeastern University in
Florida. Bishara and Pogu delivered a letter to Trump, urging him to "keep America safe and strong". In February 2018 most of the released girls were studying at the American University of Nigeria not far from the original scene of the kidnapping at Chibok. In July Nigerian police arrested and charged eight Boko Haram fighters allegedly involved in the kidnapping, with one defendant convicted and sentenced to 20 years in
prison.
Events in 2021 An unknown number of girls escaped in January 2021. In 2021 Parkinson and Hinshaw published a book (''Bring Back Our Girls: The Astonishing Survival and Rescue of Nigeria's Missing Schoolgirls'') which drew on interviews with the girls, former militants, spies and government officials. Much of the book was based on a diary kept by 24-year-old Naomi Adamu, one of the girls who had been kidnapped and freed in 2017. Adamu described her experiences, including how they had compulsory lessons on the
Quran every day and were regularly beaten with rifle butts, rope and wire. The girls who refused to be married were not abused sexually; however, they were treated as slaves and forced to provide hard manual labor. She led a group of resistant girls who refused to convert to Islam, who were threatened with being killed and
starvation by the militants. Three more were later rescued in July 2022. A woman named Aisha Grema was rescued with her child in August 2022. Three were rescued in September 2022 from different locations, while Yana Pogu was rescued along with four children later in the same month from
Bama and Rejoice Sanki was rescued from
Kawuri in October 2022.
Events in 2023 Two Chibok schoolgirls were rescued in April 2023 along with a baby; both had been married three times since being kidnapped. Another named Saratu Dauda was rescued the next month. A woman named Rebecca Kabu was rescued from Cameroon in July 2023, whilst a girl named Mary Nkeki was rescued from
Dikwa in Borno in August 2023.
Events in 2024 On 4 April, members of the Chibok community gathered to attend the screening of the film
Statues Also Breathe and to remember the women still missing. In April 2024, one of the abducted girls named Lydia Simon was rescued by the Nigerian military. In June 2024, another girl named Ehi Abdul was rescued by the Nigerian military.
Events in 2025 The federal government of Nigeria announced a grant of ₦1.85 billion to educate and rehabilitate the rescued girls in September 2025. Former Minister of Foreign Affairs
Bolaji Akinyemi stated in November 2025 that the US had planned to assist the Nigerian military in rescuing the Chibok schoolgirls, but pulled out after discovering that Boko Haram had been alerted by someone in the Nigerian military. ==Reactions==