Monday, 27 October 2014

Chibok Girls 'Used By Boko Haram On Front Line'

Photo taken from video shows the missing girls abducted from the northeastern town of Chibok


While the world is expectant that Nigeria's secret deal with Boko Haram Islamists to free more than 200 kidnapped Nigerian schoolgirls would go ahead; Boko Haram has allegedly abducted dozens more girls in north-east Nigeria, damaging hopes of a ceasefire agreement with the government.

Boko Haram insurgents reportedly abducted 30 adolescent boys and girls in Mafa village, which is 50 kilometres (30 miles) east of Maiduguri, Borno State over the weekend.

In another development, Boko Haram has been using kidnapped young women and girls on the front lines of its insurgency, according to a new report published today, October 27, 2014. Human Rights Watch made the claim as it outlined testimony from dozens of former hostages who documented physical and psychological abuse at the hands of the militants.

The dreaded Islamist Boko Haram sect


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.

Some of the escaped kidnapped girls of the government secondary school in Chibok.


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.


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