The
United Nations Security Council strongly condemned the abduction of
hundreds of Nigerian schoolgirls Friday, as the world body’s secretary
general dispatched an envoy to help find them.
The unanimous
declaration said the mass kidnappings “may amount to crimes against
humanity” under international law, but made no explicit reference to
charges in the International Criminal Court.
The 15 members of the
council said they would follow the situation and consider “appropriate
measures” to take against the Islamist group Boko Haram, which carried
out the kidnapping.
The council members “expressed their profound
outrage and condemn in the strongest terms the abduction of 276
schoolgirls” on April 14 in the northeastern town of Chibook, and the
kidnapping of eight more girls from Warabe on May 5.
The statement urged their immediate release, without conditions.
Meanwhile,
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon announced he is sending his special
representative for West Africa, Said Djinnit, to Abuja to discuss ways
of helping authorities locate the girls.
The mass abduction of girls by Boko Haram Islamists in northeastern Borno state has triggered an international outcry.
US,
British and French experts have already arrived on the ground to help
trace the schoolgirls, while around ten Nigerian army search teams are
scouring the region.
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