Denial of warnings
Defence spokesman Chris Olukolade on Saturday also denied separate reports on Friday by Al Jazeera and Amnesty International that the Nigerian military had received advance warnings of the attack on the Chibok school, describing the reports as "unfounded".
Amnesty said on Friday it was told that security forces were given four hours' notice of the attack on April 14, but failed to reinforce the town.
Two politicians from Borno state, which borders Chibok, separately told Al Jazeera's Yvonne Ndege that the army had been given at least two hours' notice.
Makmid Kamara, a Nigeria researcher for Amnesty, on Friday said: "We received information and we spoke to a senior Nigerian military officer ... that they had received intelligence reports, even before local authorities and politicians got the information, that gunmen were on their way to the Chibok town."
Kamara told Al Jazeera that senior officials in Maiduguri and Dambua towns were alerted at about 7pm on April 14, and that information was given to senior military officers based in Dambua and Maiduguri.
"Later on, at 10pm on the same night of the 14th of April, local authorities, who Amnesty had spoken to, informed us, that they informed the local military command in Chibok town about the planned attack," Kamara said.
"When I spoke to one of the senior military officials, they informed me that they [had] informed their superiors, and requested for reinforcement. But the reinforcement did not come."
The school was attacked at 11.45pm.
"Only 17 troops were there to face the attack and they were outgunned and outnumbered," Kamara said.
Sources say the Nigerian army was warned about the abductions
"They had to flee for their lives together with some other villagers."
Ndege, reporting from Abuja, said the Nigerian people would be "extremely shocked and extremely disappointed" to think the Nigerian military knew in advance an attack was going to take place and most would find it "inexcusable".
"The question is, why would the military deliberately choose to ignore this SOS?" our correspondent said.
Michelle Obama, the wife of the US president, used the president's weekly address in the US to talk about the abductions, which she described as an "unconscionable act was committed by a terrorist group".
Mrs Obama was recently featured on Twitter holding a card which read "bring back our girls".
The Obama administration had in the past opposed imposing sanctions on Boko Haram, and refused to put the armed group in the United States' foreign terrorist organisation list.
Carl Levan, an African security specialist at American University, however said that the "robust bilateral relationship" between the US and Nigeria prompted the Obama adminitration to help President Goodluck Jonathan find the abducted schoolgirls.
As condemnation of the Nigerian abductions spread, Saudi Arabia's grand mufti Sheikh Abulaziz al-Sheikh said Boko Haram rebels who kidnapped the schoolgirls had "set up to smear the image of Islam".
Al-Sheikh said Boko Haram had been "misguided" and should be "shown their wrong path and be made to reject it".
Other religious leaders in the Muslim world, who often do not comment on violence, joined in denouncing Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau for saying Allah had told him to sell off the kidnapped girls as forced brides.
Also on Saturday, Nigerian celebrities joined about 100 protesters in a march to the state governor's residence in Lagos to call for the rescue of the girls.