"The elements of trafficking are there," said Joy Ngozi Ezeilo, the UN Human Rights Council's special rapporteur on the issue, in a conference call yesterday with US-based foreign journalists.
"We cannot do politics with the lives of these young girls," said Ezeilo, a Nigerian herself, adding that she favors a negotiated solution rather than a military assault "that might jeapordize the lives of these girls."
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Boko Haram staged the mass abduction on April 14 in the northeastern Nigerian town of Chibok. In a video obtained May 5 by AFP, its leader Abubakar Shekau threatened to sell off the more than 200 young captives as "slaves."
In another video, seen last weekend, Shekau said the girls would be held in return for the release of detained Boko Haram rebels.
Bisa Williams, deputy assistant secretary of state in the US State Department's African affairs bureau, participating in the same conference call, said a "nexus" exists between human trafficking and terrorism.
But in the case of the missing Nigerian school girls, she said, "it's far too early to state that this is a trafficking incident" -- which for the United States would entail slavery, sexual exploitation or forced labour.
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