Boko Haram radicals are putting forth to free more than 200 young ladies seized from an all inclusive school in the town of Chibok in return for the arrival of aggressor pioneers held by the administration, a human rights lobbyist has told The Associated Press.
The extremist said Boko Haram's present offer is restricted to the young ladies from the school in northeastern Nigeria whose mass snatching in April 2014 touched off overall shock and a battle to "Present to Back Our Girls" that extended to the White House.
The new activity revives an offer made a year ago to the administration of previous President Goodluck Jonathan to discharge the 219 understudies in return for 16 Boko Haram prisoners, the lobbyist said. He talked on state of namelessness in light of the fact that he was not approved to converse with columnists on this touchy issue.
Fred Eno, an objective Nigerian who has been arranging with Boko Haram for over a year, told the AP that "another window of chance opened" in the most recent couple of days, however he couldn't talk about points of interest.
He said the late slew of Boko Haram phlebotomy — in the range of 350 individuals killed in the previous nine days — is steady with past tightening up of savagery as the aggressors look for a more grounded arranging position.
Eno said the 5-week-old organization of President Muhammadu Buhari offers "a new beginning" to take the activists back to arrangements that had get to be harmed by the diverse security offices and their recommendation to Jonathan.
Presidential guide Femi Adesina said on Saturday that Nigeria's administration "won't be unwilling" to converses with Boko Haram.



