The government in Nigeria recently negotiated the release of 82 young women. All 82 were students three years ago when Boko Haram militants raided their school in the northeastern Nigerian town of Chibok.

The militants kidnapped 276 schoolgirls in all.

Today Nigeria’s Ministry of Women Affairs is caring for a total of 106 freed Chibok girls in the capital, Abuja.

Boko Haram released most of them during a prisoner exchange last month. Others were freed in October after negotiations. Three of the girls escaped.

The ministry is providing skills training and educational classes to the young women. They are also receiving psychosocial support.

Women Affairs Minister Aisha Jummai Alhassan spoke about the young women at a recent event in Abuja. She said the government hopes they can return to school, possibly in September.

“They are going back to school because they had aspirations,” said Alhassan. “That was why their parents put them in school from where they were abducted. When they stabilize and when they recover, we will still put them back to school.”

The government said the Chibok girls will not return to their former school. The girls’ families and some activists have criticized the decision. But the government says it is protecting the young women.

Officials are also closely watching the girls’ progress as they take part in recreational activities and weekly religious programs. They also are taking classes in biology, English and mathematics.

The girls are expected to be in the rehabilitation program for nine months.

Allen Manasseh is a member of the Bring Back Our Girls group. He spoke with some of the young women at their rehabilitation center.

“Wherever they are, the fact that they are not with the terrorists is considered OK for them,” he said.

Manasseh told VOA the women are healthy. But more than 100 other Chibok schoolgirls are still missing. That number includes two of his cousins.

Foreign governments and aid groups are helping the former kidnap victims.

The Canadian government recently gave health care products and clothing to the girls. They smiled when they were given the items, but they did not make any statements.

Christopher Thornley is the Canadian High Commissioner to Nigeria.

“The Chibok Girls are symbolic of a vast humanitarian challenge affecting millions of lives. This is why Canada has stepped up this year to provide $27 million to U.N. agencies and NGO partners for humanitarian assistance in the Northeast. This includes $2 million that we have provided to UNFPA to support the Chibok girls as well as its interventions in the Northeast.”

The raid on Chibok by Boro Haram was the largest and most famous kidnapping in the group’s history.

The Nigerian government says it continues to negotiate with Boko Haram to gain the release of the missing schoolgirls.

I’m Alice Bryant.

Chika Oduah reported this story from Abuja for VOANews. VOA’s Hausa language service provided additional reporting. Christopher Jones-Cruise adapted the report for Learning English. George Grow was the editor.

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Words in This Story

psychosocial – adj. a combination of psychological and social

aspiration – n. something that a person wants very much to achieve

stabilize – v. to become stable or to make (something) stable, such as to stop quickly changing, increasing, getting worse, etc.

rehabilitate – v. to bring (someone or something) back to a normal, healthy condition after an illness, injury, drug problem, etc.

cousin – n. a child of your uncle or aunt

symbolic – adj. relating to or being used as a symbol; expressing or representing an idea or quality without using words

vast – adj. very great in size, amount or extent

challenge – n. a difficult task or problem; something that is hard to do

NGO – n. acronym for “non-governmental organization”

UNFPA – n. acronym for United Nations Population Fund (formerly the United Nations Fund for Population Activities)