UK Ministry of Defense says it has information about
the missing Chibok girls but cannot share it with Nigeria because according to them, revealing details of what it found
about the whereabouts of the abducted girls would clearly damage its
relationship with Nigeria and other allies.
According to Punch, this revelation came after an independent security organization, Security In Africa, who planned to storm the Sambisa forest to rescue the girls, wrote a letter to UK government asking for any information they had on the missing girls. Continue...
Part of the letter written by Security In Africa founder, Ben Oguntala reads;
According to Punch, this revelation came after an independent security organization, Security In Africa, who planned to storm the Sambisa forest to rescue the girls, wrote a letter to UK government asking for any information they had on the missing girls. Continue...
Part of the letter written by Security In Africa founder, Ben Oguntala reads;
"We seek to know the results and reports of the British Armed Forces, the details of where they searched and the results of their findings. We also seek to have the details of the technology, technique or methodology used in the search and the consequential results”.
However a response to the request letter by the UK Ministry of Defence Permanent Joint Headquarters in Middlesex, dated
February 25th stated that the UK will not be able to release any
information on its findings about the Chibok girls as some of the
information requested for has the potential of adversely affecting their
relations with their allies
"The information falls entirely within the scope of the qualified exemption provided for at section 27 (International Relations) of the FOIA and has been withheld. Section 27 is a qualified exemption and is subject to public interest testing which means that the information requested can only be withheld if the public interest in doing so outweighs the public interest in disclosure. Section 27(1)(a), (1)(c) and (2) have been applied because some of the information has the potential to adversely affect relations with our allies. The Public Interest Test concluded that whilst release would increase public understanding and confidence in the relation the United Kingdom has with other international states in its assistance with operations, the balance of the public interest lay in withholding the information you desire. We have considered it necessary to apply the higher level of prejudice against release of the exempted information at the higher level of ‘would’ rather than ‘would be likely to’ adversely affect relations with our allies.” the letter read
The
UK Defence ministry however shared information on the technology,
methodology and technique they used during the search of the Chibok
girls. According to the letter, RAF Sentinel R1 and Tornado aircraft
were used to “provide imagery and other data as part of a combined
effort with Nigeria and other nations.”
The
Sentinel R1 is the UK Royal Air Force’s only long-range wide area
battlefield surveillance asset, providing critical intelligence and
target tracking information to British and Coalition forces.
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