19
September 2014
Past Event
#WhereAreOurGirls? Escaped Schoolgirl Shares Her Account of Boko Haram Abduction

#WhereAreOurGirls? Escaped Schoolgirl Shares Her Account of Boko Haram Abduction

Past Event
Hudson Institute, Washington, D.C. Headquarters
September 19, 2014
19
September 2014
Past Event

1015 15th Street, N.W., 6th Floor
Washington, DC 20005

Speakers:
Nina Shea
Nina Shea

Senior Fellow and Director, Center for Religious Freedom

Saa*

Student and survivor of Boko Haram abduction

Emmanuel Ogebe

Managing Partner, U.S. Nigeria Law Group

Last spring, Islamic terrorist group Boko Haram drew world headlines when it abducted more than 300 schoolgirls from a school in Chibok, in Nigeria’s northern Borno state. Despite the commitment of U.S. military assistance and global awareness through the #bringbackourgirls campaign, the vast majority of the kidnapped girls have not been freed and their fate remains unknown. However, some of the girls have managed to escape by their own efforts. A few of the escaped girls arrived in the United States recently to continue their studies with the help of scholarships.

Saa*, an 18-year-old student, is one of the Chibok schoolgirls who escaped Boko Haram. This was the first public appearance by any of those girls in the United States. International human rights lawyer Emmanuel Ogebe recently concluded a one-month investigation into the suspected use of the Christian schoolgirls by Boko Haram in the rash of suicide bombings by young females reported this summer. Ogebe is scheduled to testify before the House Oversight Committee's Subcommittee on National Security on Boko Haram's declaration of a caliphate in captured territories. On Friday, September 19th, Nina Shea, director of Hudson Institute's Center for Religious Freedom, moderated a panel with Saa and Ogebe to discuss the ongoing violence of Boko Haram.

U.N. and Nigerian officials report that more than 6 million Nigerians have been affected by the Boko Haram insurgency, with more than 300,000 displaced and thousands made refugees in Chad, Niger, and Cameroon. Hundreds of women and girls are believed to have been abducted, forcibly converted to Islam, and enslaved through continual raids by Boko Haram on Christian villages. Untold numbers of Nigerian Christian men have been summarily killed for refusing to convert to Islam. Boko Haram’s attacks have increased substantially in frequency, reach, and lethality since 2010, and now occur almost daily and have spread to nation's capital and the predominantly Christian south. The U.S. State Department designated Boko Haram as a Foreign Terrorist Organization on November 14, 2013 and listed Boko Haram as the deadliest terror group in the world after the Taliban in 2013.

*Real name withheld

Related Events
05
December 2025
In-Person Event | Hudson Institute
Moldova’s Euro-Atlantic Path: Regional Security, Energy Opportunity, and Democratic Resilience
Featured Speakers:
Mihai Popșoi
Igor Grosu
Leah Kieff
Moderator:
Luke Coffey
Getty Images
05
December 2025
In-Person Event | Hudson Institute
Moldova’s Euro-Atlantic Path: Regional Security, Energy Opportunity, and Democratic Resilience

Hudson’s Luke Coffey will host Moldovan Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Mihai Popșoi, Speaker of the Moldovan Parliament Igor Grosu, and Center for Strategic and International Studies Senior Associate Leah Kieff to examine the current political, security, and geopolitical situation in Moldova and the region going forward.

Getty Images
Featured Speakers:
Mihai Popșoi
Igor Grosu
Leah Kieff
Moderator:
Luke Coffey
09
December 2025
In-Person Event | Hudson Institute
America’s Competitive Edge: Antitrust, Standards, and Intellectual Property for US Tech Leadership
Featured Speakers:
Dina Kallay
Urška Petrovčič
Getty Images
09
December 2025
In-Person Event | Hudson Institute
America’s Competitive Edge: Antitrust, Standards, and Intellectual Property for US Tech Leadership

Hudson will host an exclusive luncheon conversation with Dina Kallay, deputy assistant attorney general for international, policy and appellate at the Antitrust Division of the US Department of Justice. 

Getty Images
Featured Speakers:
Dina Kallay
Urška Petrovčič
11
December 2025
In-Person Event | Hudson Institute
Crowding in Capital: Modernizing the Department of War’s Financial Arsenal
Featured Speakers:
Rush Doshi
David Rader
Moderator:
Nadia Schadlow
Getty Images
11
December 2025
In-Person Event | Hudson Institute
Crowding in Capital: Modernizing the Department of War’s Financial Arsenal

Join Senior Fellow Nadia Schadlow and an expert panel for a discussion on the DoW’s financial tools, the extent of the department’s authorities, and the role it will play in the broader American reindustrialization effort.

Getty Images
Featured Speakers:
Rush Doshi
David Rader
Moderator:
Nadia Schadlow
12
December 2025
In-Person Event | Invite Only
Antisemitism as a National Security Threat
Featured Speakers:
Michael Doran
Bernard Haykel
Rebeccah L. Heinrichs
Can Kasapoğlu
Liel Leibovitz
Michael Sobolik
Getty Images
12
December 2025
In-Person Event | Invite Only
Antisemitism as a National Security Threat

Hudson’s Center for Peace and Security in the Middle East will convene policymakers, experts, and private sector leaders to examine how antisemitism, both foreign and domestic, threatens American security and Western civilization.

Getty Images
Featured Speakers:
Michael Doran
Bernard Haykel
Rebeccah L. Heinrichs
Can Kasapoğlu
Liel Leibovitz
Michael Sobolik