Nigeria prefers to have schoolgirls
abducted by Boko Haram from Chibok and Dapchi back alive, and that is
why it has chosen negotiation, rather than military option, says
President Muhammadu Buhari.
Receiving the American Secretary of
State, Rex Tillerson, in audience at State House, Abuja, Monday,
President Buhari added that Nigeria was working in concert with
international organizations and negotiators, to ensure that the girls
were released unharmed by their captors.
"We are trying to be careful. It
is better to get our daughters back alive," the President said.
He thanked America for assistance
rendered in the fight against insurgency, noting that Nigerian forces
are good, "but need assistance in the areas of training and
equipment."
President Buhari promised that his
administration would continue to do its best to secure the country,
adding that he would be in Yobe State, from where Dapchi schoolgirls
were abducted, later this week "as part of my condolence and
sympathy visits to areas where we have had unfortunate events."
The President pledged free and fair
polls in 2019, recalling that the then American Secretary of State,
John Kerry, had visited before the 2015 polls, "and he told the
party in government then, and those of us in opposition, to behave
ourselves, and we did."
The visiting Secretary of State
commended President Buhari on his strides in the anti-corruption war,
to which the Nigerian leader responded that moneys recovered are
being invested on development of infrastructure.
Mr Tillerson said Nigeria was a very
important country to the U.S, stressing: "You have our support
in your challenges. We will also support opportunities to expand the
economy, commercial investments, and peaceful polls in 2019."
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