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01082020 - You're cruel insentitive for care of repentant terrorists, abandoning us

Vanguard Newspaper 01 August 2020

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10—SATURDAY Vanguard, AUGUST 1, 2020<br />

Outrage as Boko o Haram<br />

am<br />

victims blast govt<br />

•Say it’s <strong>cruel</strong>, insensitive reintegrating our killers, <strong>abandoning</strong> <strong>us</strong><br />

•Giving <strong>terrorists</strong> money, vocational training, gross inj<strong>us</strong>tice to <strong>us</strong><br />

•Govt should rethink, Buhari should rehabilitate <strong>us</strong><br />

•Some <strong>of</strong> rehabilitated <strong>terrorists</strong> have rejoined Boko Haram<br />

•How can they change when you pamper them, give them money?<br />

•Saturday Vanguard visits IDP camps in Maiduguri, Kaduna, Abuja<br />

By Joseph Erunke, Abuja; Ndahi<br />

Marama, Maiduguri & Ibrahim<br />

HassanWuyo, Kaduna<br />

VICTIMS <strong>of</strong> Boko Haram attacks in<br />

the Northeast now in vario<strong>us</strong><br />

Internally Displaced Persons, IDPs’<br />

camps in the north have expressed outrage<br />

and blasted the Federal Government <strong>for</strong><br />

rehabilitating and reintegrating members<br />

<strong>of</strong> the terror group while they (victims) were<br />

left to rot away in the camps. Describing<br />

government action as <strong>cruel</strong> and the height<br />

<strong>of</strong> insensitivity, the traumatized victims said<br />

the government has not been fair to them,<br />

many <strong>of</strong> whom were killed, inflicted with<br />

life threatening injuries and their property<br />

destroyed. They said it was unacceptable to<br />

them <strong>for</strong> government to bring the same<br />

killers back into the community to co-exist<br />

with the same people whose lives they<br />

destroyed.<br />

The military had in 2016 launched<br />

Operation Safe Corridor, an initiative <strong>for</strong><br />

the deradicalisation and rehabilitation <strong>of</strong><br />

ex-Boko Haram members with the objective<br />

<strong>of</strong> reintegrating <strong>repentant</strong> Boko Haram<br />

members into the society.<br />

Last week, 601 Boko Haram members who<br />

have been deradicalized were released by<br />

the army to the Borno State Government to<br />

be rejoined with their families and relations,<br />

a situation that generated a lot <strong>of</strong> tensions<br />

among the public, victims, and host<br />

communities.<br />

Abuja<br />

Some <strong>of</strong> the IDPs,who spoke to Vanguard<br />

at their camp located at Kuchingoro, Abuja,<br />

also faulted the government <strong>for</strong> its N20,000<br />

monthly stipend to some rehabilitated<br />

members <strong>of</strong> the terrorist group, expressing<br />

fears that government’s action may rather<br />

strengthen the <strong>terrorists</strong>’ activities in the<br />

region.<br />

According to a 44-year-old man who<br />

identified himself as Ahmadu Giro at the<br />

camp, “how do you explain the fact that the<br />

government that doesn’t even know how we<br />

live here, how we are surviving here and how<br />

we feed in this camp is b<strong>us</strong>y spending money<br />

to rehabilitate people who without any<br />

provocation, took up arms and killed many<br />

innocent and law abiding citizens <strong>of</strong> the<br />

country and also destroyed their sources <strong>of</strong><br />

livelihood? Does it make any sense?”<br />

The father <strong>of</strong> three boys and a girl said<br />

they have resigned to fate as the government<br />

which they were counting on <strong>for</strong><br />

rehabilitation following the losses they<br />

incurred in the hands <strong>of</strong> the <strong>terrorists</strong> have<br />

abandoned them.<br />

He said:”The last time we saw<br />

government’s presence here was five months<br />

ago when <strong>of</strong>ficials <strong>of</strong> the National<br />

Emergency Management Agency,<br />

NEMA,came here with a bucket <strong>of</strong> liquid<br />

soap and hand sanitizer to educate <strong>us</strong> on<br />

the need to adhere to coronavir<strong>us</strong> safety<br />

measures.”<br />

Another IDP, who gave his name as Nuhu<br />

Bala, told Saturday Vanguard that he<br />

narrowly escaped the insurgents’ attack in<br />

2016 in Bama, Borno State, adding however<br />

that his mother and father were not lucky to<br />

escape.<br />

“It was a miracle that I managed to escape<br />

the Boko Haram’s attack in Bama, Borno<br />

State in 2016. I lost my parents during the<br />

attacks. How I escaped and managed to be<br />

here at this camp is still a surprise to me.<br />

Apart from my parents, we lost everything<br />

to that fateful attack. Ever since, life has not<br />

been the same. So, <strong>for</strong><br />

government to not only to<br />

rehabilitate these attackers<br />

but also place them on<br />

monthly N20,000 stipend is<br />

a gross inj<strong>us</strong>tice to the<br />

victims,” he said.<br />

He added:”To be able to<br />

feed in this camp, I wake up<br />

every morning to work <strong>for</strong><br />

people in their farms. I spend<br />

most <strong>of</strong> my time thinking<br />

everyday whether I would<br />

one day return to our<br />

ancestral home again and I<br />

think government should be<br />

foc<strong>us</strong>ed on this and not the<br />

attackers. Leaving <strong>us</strong> to our<br />

fate here at this camp and<br />

be spending money to make<br />

the lives <strong>of</strong> our attackers<br />

com<strong>for</strong>table amounts to<br />

inj<strong>us</strong>tice,” the 32 year-old<br />

fumed.<br />

Another Boko Haram<br />

victim at the camp,<br />

Mohammed Lere, from<br />

Adamawa state, said they<br />

were tired <strong>of</strong> being at the<br />

camp as life was hard <strong>for</strong> them. On how he<br />

felt over the rehabilitation <strong>of</strong> some Boko<br />

Haram members and the monthly N20,000<br />

being given to those considered <strong>repentant</strong>,<br />

he said government’s action was an<br />

approval that it was better not to be a law<br />

abiding citizen than being one.<br />

The military had in 2016<br />

launched Operation<br />

Safe Corridor, an<br />

initiative <strong>for</strong> the<br />

deradicalisation and<br />

rehabilitation <strong>of</strong> ex-Boko<br />

Haram members with<br />

the objective <strong>of</strong><br />

reintegrating <strong>repentant</strong><br />

Boko Haram members<br />

into the society<br />

“You are asking as if you don’t know what<br />

government’s action indicates. How do you<br />

explain a situation where someone that<br />

followed me to my home to attack me <strong>for</strong><br />

no j<strong>us</strong>t reason is pampered with juicy <strong>of</strong>fers<br />

leaving the person he attacked to suffer? That<br />

is the situation we have found ourselves<br />

today. And with this, how do you expect peace<br />

to reign?”,he fumed.<br />

Also, a 38 year-man, Iliyasu Ali,who said<br />

he hailed from Munguno town in Borno<br />

State, appealed to President Muhammad<br />

Buhari to empower them either financially<br />

to start their b<strong>us</strong>inesses or make their homes<br />

suitable to enable them return to start life<br />

there.<br />

“Be<strong>for</strong>e I found myself in this situation, I<br />

had a b<strong>us</strong>iness outlet where I was doing well<br />

selling second-hand clothes. Besides, I had<br />

two cars that were being <strong>us</strong>ed <strong>for</strong><br />

commercial purpose. I lost all these to Boko<br />

Haram activities in one fell swoop. We will<br />

be appreciative if the government can only<br />

send away Boko Haram members from our<br />

communities and empower<br />

<strong>us</strong> with vocational training<br />

and money to start life,” he<br />

said.<br />

Speaking also,39-year old<br />

Maimuna Adamu said she<br />

lost her h<strong>us</strong>band and two<br />

grown up children besides<br />

their ho<strong>us</strong>e which she noted,<br />

was not spared in the<br />

insurgents’ attack that saw<br />

her in her present state. She<br />

added that her 21-year-old<br />

daughter who had visited<br />

from her h<strong>us</strong>band’s ho<strong>us</strong>e on<br />

the fateful day <strong>of</strong> the attack<br />

was abducted and wondered<br />

if she was alive or had been<br />

killed by the <strong>terrorists</strong>.<br />

Adamu,who said she didn’t<br />

know how she escaped the<br />

attack that claimed the lives<br />

<strong>of</strong> her h<strong>us</strong>band and two<br />

children, begged<br />

government to restore peace<br />

in her community so that<br />

they could return home.<br />

She argued that<br />

government was not fair to<br />

the victims <strong>of</strong> the Boko Haram attacks.<br />

“How do you expect these people to think or<br />

change when you are pampering them and<br />

giving them money? You are rather telling<br />

them that they were right in what they were<br />

doing. How do you even feel rehabilitating<br />

and giving out money to someone who,<br />

without any provocation, killed people and<br />

at the same time the victims and their<br />

families that should have been considered<br />

<strong>for</strong> the rehabilitation are <strong>for</strong>gotten? I think<br />

they should rethink and do what is right,”<br />

she said.<br />

Kaduna<br />

At the IDPs’ camps in Kaduna, a widow<br />

who lamented what she went through in the<br />

hands <strong>of</strong> the insurgents expressed disg<strong>us</strong>t<br />

that the government could decide to make<br />

life com<strong>for</strong>table <strong>for</strong> the aggressors and<br />

abandon the victims to their fate.<br />

She said, “this thing is hurting. They killed<br />

my h<strong>us</strong>band in my presence, they killed my<br />

son, I’m left suffering with four young<br />

children. Till death, I will never <strong>for</strong>get that<br />

day. I was left with children, with no help or<br />

assistance. See how harsh life is today,<br />

someday we eat, another day we stay hungry,<br />

that is how we have been suffering with the<br />

children.<br />

“Look at the kind <strong>of</strong> <strong>care</strong> being given to<br />

the Boko Haram members and those <strong>of</strong> <strong>us</strong><br />

who have suffered <strong>for</strong> six years now were<br />

not taken <strong>care</strong> <strong>of</strong>. Truly, the government has<br />

not done j<strong>us</strong>tice here. I do menial jobs to get<br />

N500 to take <strong>care</strong> <strong>of</strong> the remaining children<br />

who are now out <strong>of</strong> school” she said.<br />

Similarly, a male victim said Boko Haram<br />

insurgents killed his relations and sacked<br />

his community.<br />

“They killed four <strong>of</strong> my relations. In what<br />

capacity are we going to stay with them<br />

again? Do we see them as human beings or<br />

animals? Or do they want <strong>us</strong> to meet them<br />

and take revenge?There will be a serio<strong>us</strong><br />

problem. They should go to Gwoza and<br />

Bama. Many <strong>of</strong> the <strong>repentant</strong> insurgents<br />

have rejoined the insurgency, there is nothing<br />

you can do to change a Boko Haram<br />

member,” he said.<br />

Spokesman <strong>for</strong> the Coalition <strong>of</strong> Northern<br />

Groups,CNG, Abdulaziz Suleiman, in his<br />

submission in Kaduna lamented that while<br />

the IDP camps lacked basic amenities and<br />

other infrastructure, government was<br />

rehabilitating Boko Haram members and<br />

re integrating them into the communities<br />

where they had earlier unleashed violence.<br />

According to Suleiman, “<strong>for</strong> government<br />

to even think <strong>of</strong> a phantom rehabilitation <strong>of</strong><br />

so-called repented Boko Haram members<br />

at this point, is in itself the peak <strong>of</strong><br />

misplacement <strong>of</strong> priority. It’s the height <strong>of</strong><br />

insensitivity by the government. And <strong>for</strong> this<br />

to come at a time when almost the entire<br />

north has been turned virtually into a battle<br />

ground with camps <strong>for</strong> displaced persons<br />

spread around the region, it is a<br />

confirmation that what we have are leaders<br />

who think power is an end in itself; who<br />

mobilize our people only during elections,<br />

sowing seeds <strong>of</strong> division and leaving<br />

everyone poorer and more insecure.<br />

“This joke about rehabilitation <strong>of</strong> Boko<br />

Haram <strong>repentant</strong> fighters is a veiled<br />

admission <strong>of</strong> failure <strong>of</strong> government to wake<br />

up to the magnitude <strong>of</strong> the humanitarian<br />

disaster that the Boko Haram’s activities<br />

alone have created. From every reasonable<br />

point <strong>of</strong> view, it is folly to contemplate the<br />

rehabilitation <strong>of</strong> the Boko Haram fighters<br />

said to have repented without achieving full<br />

cessation <strong>of</strong> hostilities, disarmament,<br />

demobilization and reintegration in the<br />

entire region”.<br />

Continues on page 11

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