Names of Missing Chibok Girls Listed

Heartbroken mothers holding on in hope for the safe return of their abducted daughters (Imagined by AI)

UPDATE 17 February 2025

Are Democrats complicit in funding Jihad and Islamic extremism? Read the MEF report here. According to reports, as at 30 June 2023, over 90 girls remain unaccounted for.

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Missing girls identified in the new video raises hope of finding Chibok girls alive

Parents have identified some of the girls abducted by the Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram in Nigeria two years ago in a new video, raising hopes that the girls are all alive. Activists groups are calling for renewed efforts (read more here)


 Fresh hopes of release as popular retired ex-military leader win Nigerian Presidential elections with sweeping results.


 Nigerian elections postponed as President promises a final push to subdue Boko Haram before March polls. Dare we hold our breath?


 Nigerians go to the Polls to elect a new President in February as Chibok girls remain missing.


A LONELY CHRISTMAS… Shattered hopes of release. the first Christmas without our girls and the world’s loud silence.


 NEW HOPES OF RELEASE…

… as Boko Haram and Nigeria negotiate a cease-fire six months after the abduction that shocked the world.


Update 31 August 2014:

Dr Stephen Davis – the Australian Negotiator:
“I have spoken to an escapee who described how she was being raped for 40 days by militants. I can’t stand it. It is heartbreaking.”

We carry on with our lives as though theirs has stopped being the living hell that it became FOUR MONTHS ago!!!!

Update 25 July 2014: Monica Mark (in photo) and 216 others remain in the hands of terrorists > 100days since they were stolen from their school in the night by Islamic terrorists

See the Post by FeelNubia.


BREAKING NEWS: 21 MAY 2014 21.51

President of the Nigerian Union of Teachers, Michael Olukoya has called on all its members to hold rallies nationwide tomorrow Thursday, May 22 2014 to protest the killing of more than 100 Teachers in Borno and Yobe states and the abduction of Schoolgirls at Chibok in the southern part of the North-Eastern Nigerian State of Borno. On the night of 14 April 2014, approximately 276 female students aged between 16 and 18 years were kidnapped from the Government Secondary School in the town of Chibok. The School was hosting over 500 girls from communities nearby who were sitting their final exams. Some of the girls escaped from their abductors, while 178 of the abducted girls (listed below) are still missing.


Thursday 8 May 2014: Men suspected to be members of the Boko Haram sect have blown up a bridge at the Nigerian-Cameroonian border in an action believed to be a desperate attempt at forestalling rescue operations into Cameroon by the US-led team of anti-terrorism experts who arrived in Nigeria on Thursday. Eyewitnesses say the explosion that took out the bridge occurred while a mass burial was underway in the town of Gamboru Ngala, where a Boko Haram-led raid on the small village resulted in the death of over 300 residents on Monday.

Celebrities react to threats by the leader of the Boko Haram sect to sell the Chibok girls, as Michelle Obama, First Lady of the United States joins the Social media campaign.


Wednesday 7 May: As the U.S. government sends a team of eight counter-terrorism Experts, military personnel, and law enforcement officials with expertise in investigations and hostage negotiations to help the Nigerian government in its response, news reports have hit the media that in another operation on Monday night, members of the Boko Haram Islamic insurgency drove into communities in armoured vehicles and killed about 300 people in Gamboru Ngala, Borno State. Gamboru Ngala is a border town with Cameroon. The Boko Haram insurgents also abducted 11 more girls in Warabe and Wala communities in the Chibok Local Government Area of Borno State late on Monday.

“These are the Christian Girls:
1. Deborah ​Abge
2. Awa ​Abge
3. Hauwa ​Yirma
4. Asabe ​Manu
5. Mwa ​Malam Pogu
6. Patiant ​Dzakwa
7. Saraya ​Mal. Stover
8. Mary ​Dauda
9. Gloria ​Mainta
10. Hanatu ​Ishaku
11. Gloria ​Dama
12. Tabitha ​Pogu
13. Maifa ​Dama
14. Ruth ​Kollo
15. Esther ​Usman
16. Awa ​James
17. Anthonia Yahonna
18. Kume ​Mutah
19. Aisha ​Ezekial
20. Nguba ​Buba
21. Kwanta ​Simon.
22. Kummai ​Aboku.
23. Esther ​Markus
24. Hana ​Stephen.
25. Rifkatu ​Amos
26 Rebecca ​Mallum
27.Blessing ​Abana.
28. Ladi ​Wadai
29. Tabitha ​Hyelampa.
30. Ruth ​Ngladar
31. Safiya ​Abdu
32. Na’omi ​Yahonna.
33. Solomi ​Titus
34. Rhoda ​John
35. Rebecca ​Kabu
36. Christy ​Yahi.
37. Rebecca ​Luka.
38. Laraba ​John
39. Saratu ​Markus.
40. Mary ​Usman.
41. Debora ​Yahonna.
42. Naomi ​Zakaria
43. Hanatu ​Musa
44. Hauwa ​Tella
45. Juliana ​Yakubu.
46. Suzana ​Yakubu
47. Saraya ​Paul.
48. Jummai ​Paul
49. Mary ​Sule
50. Jummai ​John.
51. Yanke ​Shittima.
52. Muli ​Waligam .
53. Fatima ​Tabji.
54. Eli ​Joseph.
55. Saratu ​Emmanuel.
56. Deborah Peter.
57. Rahila ​Bitrus.
58. Luggwa ​Sanda.
59. Kauna ​Lalai.
60. Lydia ​Emmar.
61. Laraba ​Maman.
62. Hauwa ​Isuwa.
63. Confort ​Habila.
64. Hauwa ​Abdu.
65. Hauwa ​Balti.
66. Yana ​Joshua.
67. Laraba ​Paul.
68. Saraya ​Amos.
69. Glory ​Yaga.
70. Na’omi ​Bitrus.
71. Godiya ​Bitrus.
72. Awa ​Bitrus.
73. Na’omi ​Luka.
74. Maryamu Lawan.
75. Tabitha ​Silas.
76. Mary ​Yahona.
77. Ladi ​Joel.
78. Rejoice ​Sanki.
79. Luggwa ​Samuel.
80. Comfort ​Amos.
81. Saraya ​Samuel.
82. Sicker ​Abdul.
83. Talata ​Daniel.
84. Rejoice ​Musa.
85. Deborah ​Abari.
86. Salomi ​Pogu.
87. Mary ​Amor.
88. Ruth ​Joshua.
89 .Esther ​John.
90. Esther ​Ayuba.
91. Maryamu Yakubu.
91. Zara ​Ishaku.
93. Maryamu Wavi
94. Lydia ​Habila.
95. Laraba ​Yahonna.
96. Na’omi ​Bitrus.
97. Rahila ​Yahanna.
98. Ruth ​Lawan.
99. Ladi ​Paul.
100. Mary ​Paul.
101. Esther ​Joshua.
102. Helen ​Musa.
103. Margret Watsai.
104. Deborah Jafaru.
105. Filo ​Dauda.
106. Febi ​Haruna.
107. Ruth ​Ishaku.
108. Racheal Nkeki.
109. Rifkatu Soloman.
110. Mairama yahaya.
111. Saratu ​Dauda.
112. Jinkai ​Yama.
113. Margret Shettima.
114. Yana ​Yidau.
115. Grace ​Paul.
116. Amina ​Ali.
117. Palmata Musa
118. Awagana Musa
119. Pindar ​Nuhu
120.Yana ​Pogu.
121. Saraya ​Musa
122. Hauwa ​Joseph.
123. Hauwa ​kwakwi.
125. Hauwa ​Musa.
126. Maryamu Musa.
127. Maimuna Usman.
128. Rebeca Joseph.
129. Liyatu ​Habitu.
130. Rifkatu Yakubu.
131. Naomi ​Philimon.
132. Deborah Abbas.
133. Ladi ​Ibrahim.
134. Asabe ​Ali
135. Maryamu Bulama.
136. Ruth ​Amos.
137. Mary ​Ali
138. Abigail Bukar
139. Deborah Amos
140. Saraya ​Yanga
141. Kauna ​Luka
142. Christiana Bitrus
143. Yana ​Bukar
144. Hauwa ​Peter
145. Hadiza ​Yakubu.
146. Lydia ​Simon
147. Ruth ​Bitrus .
148. Mary ​Yakubu
149. Lugwa ​Mutah.
150. Muwa ​Daniel.
151. Hanatu ​Nuhu
152. Monica Enoch.
153. Margret Yama.
154. Docas ​yakubu.
155. Rhoda ​Peter
156. Rifkatu Galang
157. Saratu ​Ayuba.
158. Naomi ​Adamu.
159. Hauwa ​Ishaya
160. Rahap ​Ibrahim
162. Deborah Soloman.
163. Hauwa ​Mutah
164. Hauwa ​Takai.
165. Serah ​Samuel.

Below are the Muslim Girls.
166. Aishatu Musa.
167. Aishatu Grema.
168. Hauwa ​Nkeki
169. Hamsatu Abubakar
170. Mairama Abubakar.
171 Hauwa ​Wule
172. Ihyi ​Abdu
173. Hasana Adamu.
174. Rakiya ​Kwamtah
175. Halima ​Gamba.
176. Aisha ​Lawan .
177. Kabu ​Malla
178. Yayi ​Abana.
179. Falta ​Lawan.
180. Kwadugu Manu

READ the rest of this article at THE WILL.

Peaceful protests are being staged all over the country and several online petitions have been raised to pressure the seemingly apathetic Nigerian government to step up action to rescue the girls. To sign the petition, follow this link

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