Goodluck jonathans government
Nigerian schoolgirls still missing a year later
Today marks a year since 200 schoolgirls were kidnapped by terror group Boko Haram.
Nigeria's electoral commission said on Saturday it would extend voting into an extra day.
All roads have been closed & commercial activity has been shut down following an attack just after midnight.
Officials are concerned the northeast may be so destabilised by Boko Haram militants.
Nigeria's opposition leader has described one of the bombings as an assassination attempt.
Goodluck Jonathan assured parents he will do everything possible to secure the release of the girls.
A security source said the gunmen struck before dawn shooting dead residents.
UN Ambassador Malala Yousafzai urged Nigeria to intensify efforts to find the missing girls.
Nigeria’s former president Olusegun Obasanjo said the country took too long to respond to the mass abduction.
Goodluck Jonathan’s govt will get more military and tactical support to combat Boko Haram.
Gunmen in combat uniforms rode army trucks through Borno state area firing on villagers and burning houses.
Four more kidnapped Nigerian schoolgirls have escaped but 219 are still missing.
A suicide car bomb has claimed five lives in the nightlife district of north Nigeria's Kano.
ANC Women’s League members gather to pledge support to the Bring Back Our Girls campaign.
Govt officials initially said they were exploring all options with respect to the swap proposal.
Boko Haram has offered to release the abducted schoolgirls in exchange for its members held in detention.
Nigerian President says he’s optimistic that with the support from other countries success will be achieved.
A report accuses the Nigerian military of knowing Boko Haram was on its way to kidnap the girls.
Goodluck Jonathan believes the schoolgirls abducted by militants have not been moved.