At the University of
Maiduguri Teaching Hospital lay a 15-year-old girl in indisposed state; her
face and head were bandaged, leaving slits through which only a bruised eye and
swollen lips were visible. On her body were clearer signs of trauma, with burns
running from her neck down to the lower parts of her body.
Around her bed wafted a
foul smell, which a nurse who came to attend to her attributed to a septic
wound in the girl’s skull.
A nurse who did not want to
be named because she was not authorised to speak to the press told the
icirnigeria.org that a group of people from the biggest internally displaced
persons (IDP) camp in Maiduguri dumped Lami (the surnames of all victims in this
report are withheld to protect them) at the hospital.
“We have many of them.
They’d been either raped in the camp or sold by those that should be protecting
them in the camps,” the nurse said.
Approached by the reporter,
Lami tried to speak, but her voice was muffled to a whisper as pains coursed
through her body.
She said her parents were
killed by Boko Haram insurgents in her village and she managed to reach
Maiduguri, capital of Borno State, in an open truck that dropped people off at
a camp for displaced persons.
In the course of moving
from one camp to the other, she was separated from her younger brother. “I do
not know where he is,” she said through muffled sobs.
Lami said some government officials came to
the camp and took many young girls away and later sold them as slaves. She
ended up in the house of one Alhaji Aliyu, whose brother and wife abused her.
While Aliyu’s brother repeatedly raped her, his wife weighed in with physical
abuse.
“One day, some people came
to the camp and said that they were taking us to a better place. That was how I
got to Alhaji Aliyu’s house and it was there, every day, his brother forcibly
slept with me.
“After that, he would beat
me and one of Alhaji’s wifes too would always beat me. One day she attacked me
with a knife. That was how I got the wound in my skull,
In Gombe, 16-year-old
Laraba told the icirnigeria.org that an official of the state emergency relief
agency named Ibrahim took her from the camp where she was to his home on the
pretext that she would be helping the wife with household chores.
“I was happy leaving the
camp, but when we got to his house, there was no wife. He raped me continuously
for three nights, locked me inside his house for days and threatened me.”
She continued: “I managed
to escape and came back to the camp. I got pregnant. An old woman we call
‘Kaka’, gave me some leaves. I was bleeding for almost two weeks and smelling.”
She said she is currently
feeling better and has overcome the ordeal. But she had to suffer in silence,
as she could not tell anyone because she thought nobody would believe her and
for fear of being sent away from the camp.
“I am not the only one this
has happened to and I am sure Ibrahim, the health worker, is not the only one
doing this type of thing,” she said.
Thirty-two-year-old Binta caught our
reporter’s attention as she muttered to herself, looking like a traumatised
person. The tale she told was shocking and distressing. Sadly, no one believes
her or is willing to do anything about it.
“After the attack in Mubi,
I fled with my one-year-old child. From the first camp we were, a secondary
school, I was told a family in Yola was coming to take us. They came to pick me
and my baby. When I saw them I was suspicious, but what could I do, without
anyone to help? I put my baby in the car, and they sped away,” she said
resignedly.
Binta is realistic to know
that she might never see her baby again but her problem is what to tell her
husband from whom she was separated in the aftermath of the attack on Mubi.
“I have lost all hope of
ever seeing my baby again. I do not know whether my husband is alive or not. A
family member says he was among those who ran to Cameroun.
“If he finds me tomorrow,
what do I tell him about our baby?” she wondered.
Kingsley Ogar, a member of staff of an
international donor agency, who did not want his organisation named, confirmed
that child trafficking is rife in the IDP camps.
“We had a case in Gombe
where a group of persons came from the South, Lagos or Ibadan, we can’t be so
sure, paid some people and took away children from the camp.
“We went to deliver relief
items in this particular IDP camp and took a census so that we could come back
the following day, which we did, only to realise that over a dozen of them were
missing. They were mostly young children between the ages of 5 and 15.
“Upon investigation, we
discovered that some ‘lords’ in the camp were colluding with the Lagos people
to sell the kids.
“We reported to the police
(Gombe State command), but we do not know whether they have done anything,” he
said.
Our reporter visited the camp posing as an
official of a church that takes care of children and made startling
discoveries. An official in the camp named Raila, who wore the reflective vest
of the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), told the reporter to wait
while she went into a makeshift office. There, she spoke with a male colleague,
whom she said was an official of NEMA.She returned to announce:
“You will pay N50,000 for
each child and you can only go with three if you want them today,
Without any attempt at
verifying the reporter’s identity and in less than 30 minutes, three children
were ready to be sold, possibly never to return to their roots.
Culled from Thisday
What a bitter experience, may God heal Lami
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