Nigeria schoolgirls
Boko Haram violence leaves families 'teetering on edge of famine' - aid groups
The group’s 7-year insurgency to create an Islamic state in northeast Nigeria has killed 15,000 people.
The Nigerian army has released a statement saying the suspects have information on the girls’ exact location.
Amnesty International says the women & girls were turned into cooks, sex slaves & fighters.
Boko Haram sparked global outrage six months ago when it abducted more than 200 Nigerian schoolgirls.
A man posing as the group’s leader in numerous videos has also reportedly been killed in clashes.
Cameroon has introduced measures to increase security on its long jungle border with Nigeria.
Thousands of people have fled an area in northeast Nigeria after a spate of assaults.
UN Ambassador Malala Yousafzai urged Nigeria to intensify efforts to find the missing girls.
A blast hit a busy market killing at least eight people in the Borno State capital of Maiduguri.
Nigeria's military have arrested a man who may have played a key role in kidnapping 200 schoolgirls.
Cameroon bolstered its northern defences to protect its citizens and to avert Boko Haram attacks.
An explosion hit a venue in the northeast Nigerian where fans had gathered to watch a World Cup match.
Nigeria’s former president Olusegun Obasanjo said the country took too long to respond to the mass abduction.
Soldiers stopped the woman as she tried to get into the barracks with explosives hidden under her robes.
Gunmen in combat uniforms rode army trucks through Borno state area firing on villagers and burning houses.
Police said protesters were free to march in Abuja were they had been previously stopped.
Reports say at least 40 people have been killed in a bombing on a football pitch in northeast Nigeria.
The 15 Nigerian soldiers were no match for the forces of Boko Haram but backup never arrived.
Four more kidnapped Nigerian schoolgirls have escaped but 219 are still missing.