It is 10 years since that attack that shocked the world and resulted in the kidnapping of 276 girls from a school in Nigeria by the terrorist group Boko Haram. A decade later, 82 of those minors are still captive.

Yagana was one of the girls kidnapped in Chibok in 2014. One day, managed to escape from his captors and today remembers all those who could not do it. “Those who remain in the mountains are my friends and I am praying that one day we will meet again,” he says.

a decade later 82 girls are still missing and nothing is known about them, like Solomon’s daughter, who can barely speak without breaking down at the memory of her. “When I remember her… I’m sorry,” she says as her voice breaks.

After breaking into the Chibok girls’ school, the terrorist group Boko Haram took the kidnapped girls to the forests. Since then, there have been other 17 mass kidnappings in Nigeria, according to Amnesty International. A figure that amounts to more than 1,700 boys and girls kidnapped in the last decade.

“The girls have told a real catalog of horrors and sexual violence.Some have said that they were raped every dayalso that they were forced into marriages with their kidnappers,” asserts Olatz Cacho, spokesperson for Amnesty International in Spain. And, “kidnapping is a clear form of financing that armed groups have.”

On the other hand, the Nigerian government ““He hasn’t put anyone in jail.”. Therefore, kidnappings continue to happen with total impunity for the captors. In fact, the ineffectiveness of the Nigerian Government has left many of the kidnapping victims in limbo and without any type of support.

Dinah was another of those kidnapped in 2014. She was able to leave Chibok and managed to resume her studies in the United States. “I don’t think two weeks will go by without at least remembering something from there.“, he says, referring to the cruelty he experienced during his captivity. He is now pursuing a doctorate, precisely, on how to combat groups like Boko Haram.