Suspected Islamist fighters kidnapped about 30 children, including girls as young as 11, in Borno state at the weekend. A week earlier, at least 40 women and girls were seized in neighbouring Adamawa. Both kidnappings and continued violence in northeast Nigeria and northern Cameroon have cast doubt on government claims of a ceasefire deal and agreement for the release of 219 schoolgirls held since April.
In the human rights report,
one 19-year-old woman who was held in militant camps for three months last year
said she was forced to participate in Boko Haram attacks.
“I
was told to hold the bullets and lie in the grass while they fought. They came
to me for extra bullets as the fight continued during the day,” she said.“ When
security forces arrived at the scene and began to shoot at us, I fell down in
fright. The insurgents dragged me along on the ground as they fled back to
camp.
In another operation, she
said she was handed a knife to kill one of five captured civilian vigilantes
brought to one of the camps and summarily executed. “I was
shaking with horror and couldn’t do it. The camp leader’s wife took the knife
and killed him,” she said. .A wave of
attacks by female suicide bombers earlier this year prompted speculation that
Boko Haram may have been using abducted women and young girls to carry out
attacks. But there has been no
concrete evidence to prove whether the attackers were kidnap victims who were
coerced or volunteers. In July, a
10-year-old was detained in Katsina state, northwest Nigeria, and found to be
strapped with explosives
In all, 30 women and girls
between April 2013 and April this year were interviewed, including 12 of the 57
who fled when the militants raided a school in Chibok, Borno state, taking away
the 219 others. The women, who were held from between two days to three months,
were seized from their homes and villages, while working on the land, fetching
water or at school.
They described how they
were held in eight different camps thought to be in the vast Sambisa Forest
area of Borno and the Gwoza hills, which separates Nigeria from Cameroon.
Human Rights Watch said
more than 500 women and girls have been abducted since the start of the
insurgency in 2009, although other estimates put the figure in the high
hundreds. In the camps, they described seeing
other women and children some of them infants and others as old as 65 but were
unable to say whether all of them had also been kidnapped. They were made to
cook, clean and perform household chores.
Some were forced to carry
stolen goods seized by the insurgents after attacks. The report gives an insight into life for the
kidnap victims, including those from Chibok, whose plight attracted worldwide
attention. One of the interviewees said she saw some of the Chibok girls forced
to cook and clean for other women and girls who had been chosen for “special
treatment because of their beauty”.
The women also talked about
rape as well as physical violence, including one who said she had a noose
placed around her neck and was threatened with death until she converted to
Islam.
One 15-year-old said she
complained that she was too young to marry one of the militants but a Boko
Haram commander dismissed her concerns, saying his five-year-old daughter got
married the previous year.
Boko Haram has used
kidnapping as a tactic since the start of its insurgency in 2009 but Human
Rights Watch said the authorities had done nothing to prevent it or bring those
responsible to book.
Survivors were not
receiving adequate support such as mental health and medical after-care on
their release, said Human Rights Watch’s Africa director, Daniel Bekele. Funds
had been set up for the Chibok escapees but support had not been provided to
other victims, he added.


Yes absolutely nothing.
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