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Amina Nkeki, a survivor of the infamous Chibok schoolgirl abduction, has revealed distressing details about her former classmates still held captive by insurgents. Speaking on Sunrise Daily, Nkeki disclosed that some of the abducted girls, now mothers, have borne at least three children each while in captivity.

The 2014 kidnapping saw terrorists raid the Government Girls Secondary School in Chibok, Borno state, abducting approximately 276 girls. Over the years, some have been released or escaped, yet around 108 remain missing.

Nkeki highlighted the harsh conditions faced by these women, including hunger, illness, and the challenges of motherhood under captivity. She also shared her own harrowing experience, revealing that she agreed to marry one of the insurgents as a means of securing freedom.

Nkeki recounted her escape during a gunfight between troops and insurgents, describing the arduous journey through the forest until they found their way out after over a month.

Despite the ordeal, Nkeki has since embarked on a new path, pursuing her education as a 200-level mass communication student at a university in Yola, Adamawa state.