tv Nightline ABC April 28, 2016 12:37am-1:05am EDT
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good night. >> this is a special edition of "nightline" "nightline." bring back our girls. the stolen speak. >> tonight, boko haram terror. the missing girls. we go to the front lines in africa tonight. >> we're loading up to go further north to a jihadi hot bed looking for the stolen girls and thousands of others taken, some into sexual slavery. >> these guys show up and say i have a choice. i'm going to kill you or you can marry me. >> carrying a bible or going to school can be a death warrant. children not just victims but weapons, suicide bombers. new details about the tactics used by the terrorists who pledge their allegiance to isis. and the search for the girls brings us to home.
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so glad you're joining us as we embark on an extraordinary journey to the front lines of a jeed di battle ground in africa. it's been two hours since boko haram stole nearly 3 00 teenage girls from their school and the hash tag "bring back our girls" came. since then thousands more kidnapped and some managed to escape and speak out tonight about what they saw. new details of children now being used as decide bombers. up close tonight inside a haunting mystery. >> reporter: flanked by a team of u.s. special ops and nigerian air support we're loading up into armored vehicles to go north. we're heading for the front lines against the battle of african jihad. >> it's an our dip plo lovelomatic
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>> this is boko haram territory. they made themselves known to the world two years ago. kidnapping nearly 3 00 girls from their school in a nigerian town. >> i abducted your girls. i'll sell them in the market. >> it's a tragedy. it's a tragedy that young women are kidnapped. >> reporter: the mass abduction triggered global outrage and a campaign, "bring back our girls". >> this act was committed by a terrorist group determined to keep these girls from getting an education. >> reporter: though some managed to escape. >> they said if we run, or shout, they'll shoot all of us. >> reporter: most are still missing. and so are thousands of other women and children also kidnapped. which is why we're traveling with the u.s. ambassador to the
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she's here to reto focus on the kidnapping. this is a home to people fleeing from the terror. not this teenager, she's asked us not to show her face. she fears for her life. >> how old were you when boko haram came? >> she says she was 14 when she was forced to marry a boko haram fighter. >> translator: sometimes when women flee the men they were married to, they catch them and slaughter them. >> tell me your reaction. >> what is there to say? i mean, you're a 14-year-old girl in your village. these guys show up and they say hey, i have a choice for you. i'm going to kill you or you can marry me. she feels that was a choice? that wasn't a choice. they didn't give her a choice.
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all she carries with her at least that she conveyed was a sense that she made the wrong choice. >> reporter: even after being rescued and returned to their families, they face stigma from their communities. >> they destroy us and destroy life. >> when you talk to these kids, they have the same story. their families were drifren out of their villages often witnessing their parents be killed and then fleeing for days into the forest before arriving in a camp like this. >> reporter: we hear heart breaking stories of sexual slavery, forced majors, forced conversions. and senseless killings. >> translator: they showed a gun and said whoever holds the bible, we slaughter them, and whoever goes to church gets the same thing. >> reporter: this woman tells us how six fighters slit her father's throat and cut out his tongue before her eyes. children like these are not just victims. they're now being used as
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boko haram turning kidnapped boys and girls into suicide bombers. often the reporting treats it like it's willingly strapping on the belt and reading the koran did. when you're 14. there's reports of 8-year-old suicide bombers and it's being treated as if they're willful. >> reporter: they are brainwashed into thinking it's a direct path to god or coerced or drugged or remotely detonated. of the 151 suicide attacks in the region last year, one in five were children and 75% of those bombers were girls. turning women and children once seen as innocent into potential threats. >> many don't know what they're carrying. >> reporter: the african generals waging this war have
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this security briefing belearned the terror group is using new tools and tactics from suicide belts to a new kind of ied. birds being used as bombs, and boko haram recently pledged allegiance to isis. >> they share procedures and you can see it by the way they conduct their attacks. >> reporter: u.s. troops are not fighting here, but they are advising and sharing intelligence in the search for the missing girls. >> lined up against a yellow wall, 15 girls. >> reporter: cnn recently obtain third down so-called proof of life video that purports to show some of the girls alive. though authorities are skeptical about the video, it's sparking renewed vigor. the wildly held theory is they're alive but separated living in a forest, a stronghold of boko haram. we'll hear more about that later.
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capital of nigeria. we're driving a couple miles outside of the city center. these camps are a strange purgatory. there's signs of people trying to create a semblance of their past lives. here are your children's shoes. that's good storage. nice to meet you. where are you going? this is a mother of eight and gives me a tour of her modest two room shack. she,er a husband and six of her eight children sleep on the floor here. she tells us her family used to be able to farm for themselves. now she says they have to rely on charity. where are you going by yourself with your beans and yams? is this where you live? [ singing in foreign language ] >> reporter: hear the nurse si students is not just heart
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it's an act of defiance. it means western education is sinful, boko haram. so far they've destroyed 900 schools, targeted and killed 600 teachers according to human rights watch. many of these students were just toddlers. when their families were forced on a trek for days. no food or water through the mountains to safety. do you think these children will grow up to fight boko haram? >> they will fight boko haram when they are grown up, yes. >> reporter: suddenly, a phone call. an urgent update about two women we've been planning to meet. both say they managed to escape boko haram. we just got word one of the
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come still going to come? >> yeah. she's willing to come. >> reporter: i just need a minute. when we finally get to meet the other woman, she is still grieving for her friend. they were held in captivity by boko haram together. have you seen the baby yet? this is the baby. this is the first time she is seeing the baby. she says villagers call it the boko baby. his given name is mouhammad. the moment passes. creating a good future for the baby is at the heart of the mission here. some children who talk about dreaming of being educated and boko haram says their main objective is to stop western education, and this is a situation where the children, all they want to do is learn.
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is pledging to give more aid. but endless hours of diplomacy could be overshadowed by a single moment. a 7-year-old boy chasing security helicopters, we're told, darted into the road. one of the armored cars ahead of us hits him head on. i see his limp body in the middle of the road. we've just gotten word that the young child hit has passed away. power later offers her personal condolences to the family. while we wait the villagers stare down our convoy, anger mixed with helplessness. >> what was your reaction on that day and moment? >> i think the worst day of my professional life. what can you say? you come here to try to help, to try somehow to offer words of
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the hardest thing i've ever done. the mother's face will stay in my dreams forever. >> reporter: it's been two years since that infamous night when 300 schoolgirls were taken by the terror group, boko haram. 219 are still missing. >> e businesslizabeth joseph. victoria william. >> reporter: early on, some managed a daring escape. >> there is not my real name. i use it for protection, and i'm one of the girls that escaped. >> reporter: she and eight others are now here studying in the united states.
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their way of protecting themselves while in public. >> school was great until one day when the boko haram came in unexpected. >> reporter: they say men with guns broke in and started yelling that they knew about the education they were getting. >> and all that said, everybody already knew they are boko haram. >> we didn't say anything because we are all scared. they have guns. they said if we run or we shout, they're going to shoot all of us. they start burning our clothes, our books, and everything. >> reporter: they both say the fighters led them into the forest where they loaded them onto trucks. >> i was thinking since they're here, they're taking us somewhere. i'm going to die. >> reporter: so both girls made the life or death decision to jump. >> i said god help me. not. me, i don't know. >> i would rather fall down out of the truck and die than to go
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here, my parents might have my body and bury it. >> reporter: after a night hiding from boko haram in the forest, they finally make it back to your families. >> when i reach home my mom and family are crying. >> reporter: she says the one night traum tiegzed her so much it took a lot of convincing to get her to come to school here. >> boko haram said if we go to school anywhere and they find out, they'll kill us and our family. i was scared and i told her i'm not going to school anymore. i'm done with school. >> reporter: now both girls are studying in the u.s. looking to the future. but they miss the families they left behind. >> i was so worried about my family. i know that i'm safe here, i'm okay, but it's not safe for my family back there in nigeria. >> reporter: their loved ones are okay for now, and we were able to track down blessing eegs father when we were there. >> do you want to hear what he says?
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for his daughter who he hasn't seen in over a year. >> give her a message. i want her to be a doctor. and study. >> reporter: is your daughter a strong person? >> he said you're a strong woman. are you? >> i hope so. >> reporter: they say they must be strong for their friends that are missing. the video triggering a lot of emotions. >> i recognize their faces and they're my classmates, so i was just crying. i just wish i could talk to them. they might feel maybe people don't care about them. no one go and look for them, but i wish i can tell them that we still love them and i wish i could tell them how much we miss them here. >> i just wanted to tell the world that we'll never forget about those girls that are in the captivity. >> we are no longer just children from nigeria. they are global citizens. >> reporter: in nigeria their
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the search for the missing girls. but while the world awaiting their homecoming, perhaps the best revenge against boko haram is an education. you guys are awesome. >> back in a moment with a few personal reflections on our trip to africa that we'll never forget. how are you supposed to choose one? simple. you don't. at red lobster's create your own seafood trios, you get to pick 3 of 9 all-new creations for just $15.99. and with this many new flavors trust me, you'll be glad you can try three. like creamy baked lobster alfredo and grilled chimichurri shrimp and panko-crusted crab cakes bursting with crabmeat. because some choices are hard, but this one, this one's easy.
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they managed to kill more civilians than isis last year. but everywhere we traveled when i look into the faces of these children, i see my own children. [ singing in foreign language ] >> reporter: smiling, laughing, but as one translator says, not laughing on the inside. which makes me marvel even more at their independence. where are you going by yourself with your beans and yams? i saw her walk all the way across the camp by herself. their dignity, and the overused word here at home, resilience. bye bye. >> bye bye. >> reporter: and my thanks to tonight to our team of producers and editors.
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