Boko
Haram fighters killed older boys and men in front of their families before
taking women and children into the forest where many died of hunger and
disease, freed captives told Reuters on
Sunday after they were brought to a refugee camp in Yola, Adamawa State.
The
Nigerian army rescued hundreds of women and children last week from the
Islamist fighters in Sambisa Forest in a major operation that has turned
international attention to the plight of hostages.
After
days on the road in pickup trucks, hundreds were released on Sunday into the
care of authorities at a refugee camp in Yola, to be fed and treated for
injuries. They spoke to reporters for the first time.
“They
didn’t allow us to move an inch,” said one of the freed women, Asabe Umaru,
describing her captivity. “If you needed the toilet, they followed you. We were
kept in one place. We were under bondage.
“We thank
God to be alive today. We thank the Nigerian army for saving our lives,” she
added.
Two
hundred and seventy-five women and children, some with heads or limbs in
bandages, arrived in the camp late on Saturday.
Nearly
700 kidnap victims have been freed from the Islamist group’s forest stronghold
since Tuesday, with the latest group of 234 women and children liberated on
Friday.
“When we
saw the soldiers we raised our hands and shouted for help. Boko Haram who were
guarding us started stoning us so we would follow them to another hideout, but
we refused because we were sure the soldiers would rescue us,” Umaru, a 24
year-old mother of two, told Reuters.
The
prisoners suffered malnutrition and disease, she said. “Every day we witnessed
the death of one of us and waited for our turn,” Mrs. Umaru added.
Another
freed captive, Cecilia Abel, said her husband and first son had been killed in
her presence before the militia forced her and her remaining eight children
into the forest.
For two
weeks before the military arrived she had barely eaten.
“We were
fed only ground dry maize in the afternoons. It was not good for human
consumption,” she said. “Many of us that were captured died in Sambisa Forest.
Even after our rescue about 10 died on our way to this place.”
The
prisoners freed so far do not appear to include any of more than 200
schoolgirls snatched from school dormitories in Chibok town a year ago, an
incident that drew global attention to the six-year-old insurgency.
Umaru
said her group of prisoners never came in contact with the missing Chibok
girls.
Meanwhile,
the 23 Armoured Brigade of the Nigerian Army based in Yola, Adamawa State, has
handed over 275 women and children rescued from insurgents in Sambisa Forest to
the National Emergency Management Agency for rehabilitation.
Receiving
the rescued persons, the Director-General, NEMA, Sani Sidi, said the rescued
women and children needed special attention and that the agency had made all
the necessary arrangements with relevant stakeholders for trauma counselling.

No comments:
Post a Comment