Chibok girls kidnapper Haruna Yahaya jailed in Nigeria
A Nigerian court has jailed a Boko Haram militant involved in the 2014 kidnapping of the Chibok girls.
Haruna Yahaya, 35, is the first member of the group to be sentenced for playing a part in the mass abduction.
The former trader, who confessed to his role in taking the 276 schoolgirls, argued he was made to act under duress.
But
judges sitting at a military court in Kanji, who are hearing the cases
of more than 1,000 suspected Boko Haram militants, dismissed his excuse.
They were also unmoved by his pleas for leniency on the grounds
of his disability, which has left him with a paralysed arm and deformed
leg, BBC News' Ishaq Khalid reports.
Justice ministry spokesman Salihu Isah confirmed to news agency AFP that Yahaya was given a 15-year jail sentence.
Yahaya,
who came from Potiskum, in Yobe state, north-east Nigeria, was captured
by a vigilante group called Civilian JTF in 2015 - a year after the
girls were snatched from Government Girls Secondary School in Borno
state.
Of the 276 girls taken in April 2014, 112 are still in captivity.
This week, some 700 of the suspected militants are due to appear before the judges in Kanji, according to sources at the court.
On Monday, 20 were found guilty of crimes associated with Boko Haram, while two were discharged for lack of evidence.
BBC
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