Calls are being mounted for US action to help find and free more than 200 Nigerian schoolgirls kidnapped last month by brutal militants, amid growing outrage and fears over their fate.
US officials said they worried many of the girls seized three weeks ago had now been smuggled across Nigeria's borders into other countries, which could complicate already fruitless efforts to find them.
"We cannot close our eyes to the clear evidence of barbarity unfolding before us in Nigeria," said Democratic Senator Amy Klobuchar, her voice breaking as she addressed the Senate yesterday.
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The outlawed militant group Boko Haram claimed responsibility earlier for the April 14 abduction of some 276 teenage girls from their boarding school in northeastern Borno state.
And the group's shadowy leader, Abubakar Shekau, threatened to sell them into slavery in a 57-minute video obtained by AFP that the State Department said appears "to be legitimate."
There has been mounting anger and frustration in Nigeria at the failure of President Goodluck Jonathan's administration to find the girls aged 16 to 18, leading to protests on the streets.
"Some of the family members armed only with bows and arrows to fight terrorists armed with assault rifles rode into the forests on motorcycles to try to find their girls," said Klobuchar.
Six US senators have introduced a resolution supporting the Nigerian people and calling for the immediate release and return of the girls.
"We and our African allies should do everything to help the Nigerian government rescue innocent girls and return them to their families," Senator Dick Durbin, one of the resolution's sponsors, said in a tweet.
He called the Boko Haram kidnapping "an affront to the civilized world."
State Department deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf said Washington worries many of the girls have been moved out of the country, after local officials in northeastern Nigeria told AFP the girls had likely been taken to nearby Chad or Cameroon.
Fifty-three of the girls managed to escape from the militants but 223 were still being held, Nigerian state police said Friday.
"We have many indications many of them have likely been moved out of the country to neighboring countries," Harf told reporters.
"We will continue working with" the Nigerian authorities, she added, refusing to outline specific US help.