The father of a kidnapped Nigerian schoolgirl has revealed photographs of his daughter pictured before she was taken away by the Boko Haram.
His daughter Mary was taken alongside her closest friend who lives next door to her.
Speaking to ITV News, Mary's father said he is desperate with worry and the thought of what his daughter is going through.
Five of his nieces have also been snatched by the militant group Boko Haram which is holding 276 female students.
This week it released a video showing around 100 of the girls and said they will only be freed after the government releases jailed militants.
Mary's father was shown the video in the hope he may recognise his own child or nieces.
Despite not seeing his own daughter he did recognise a girl, he believes to be around 16 or 17, who lives opposite to his family's home.
Mary, pictured left, with her best friend who was also kidnapped by the militant group last month
Washington has sent military, law-enforcement and development experts to Nigeria to help search for the missing girls who were kidnapped by the militants from a secondary school in Chibok in remote north-eastern Nigeria on April 14.
‘We have shared commercial satellite imagery with the Nigerians and are flying manned ISR (intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance) assets over Nigeria with the government's permission,’ a U.S. official said.
Two U.S. officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the United States was also considering deploying unmanned drone aircraft to aid the search.
Extremist group Boko Haram seized 276 girls who were taking exams at a school in Borno's north-eastern village of Chibok on April 14
Boko Haram paraded the shell-shocked teenagers on a chilling video, in which the leader, Abubaker Shekau, chuckled and confirmed his prisoners - the vast majority of them Christians - had been forced to convert to Islam.
The girls recite Islamic prayers during the clip as they sit in a group in a wooded area
Parents were trying to turn on a generator in Chibok, hoping to watch it and identify their daughters, said a town leader, Pogu Bitrus.
‘There's an atmosphere of hope - hope that these girls are alive, whether they have been forced to convert to Islam or not,’ he told The Associated Press by telephone. ‘We want to be able to say, “These are our girls.”’
The video showed about 100 girls, indicating they may have been broken up into smaller groups as some reports have indicated.
Fifty-three girls managed to escape and 276 remain missing, police say.
Bitrus said vegetation in the video looked like the Sambisa Forest, some 20 miles (30 kilometers) from Chibok, where the girls were believed to have been spirited away.
Source: Daily Mail
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