Boko Haram fighters stoned their captives to death as rescuers
approached, while other girls and women
held by the jihadists were
crushed by an armoured car and killed by an exploding landmine as they
walked to freedom.
Through tears, smiles and eyes filled with pain, the survivors of
months in the hands of the Islamic extremists told their stories to The
Associated Press on Sunday, their first day out of the war zone.
“We just have to give praise to God that we are alive, those of us
who have survived,” said 27-year-old Lami Musa as she cradled her
5-day-old baby girl.
She was among 275 girls, women and their young children, many
bewildered and traumatised, who were getting medical care and being
registered a day after making it to safety.
Nigeria’s military said it has freed nearly 700 Boko Haram captives
in the past week. It is still unclear if any of them were among the
so-called “Chibok girls,” whose mass abduction from their school a year
ago sparked outrage worldwide and a campaign for their freedom under the
hashtag #BringBackOurGirls.
Musa was in the first group of rescued women and girls to be
transported by road over three days to the safety of the Malkohi refugee
camp, a dust-blown deserted school set among baobab trees opposite a
military barracks on the outskirts of Yola, the capital of northeastern
Adamawa state.
Last week’s rescue saved her from a forced marriage to one of the killers of her husband, she said.
“They took me so I can marry one of their commanders,” she said of
the militants who carried her away from her village after slaughtering
her husband and forcing her to abandon their three young children, whose
fates remain unknown. That was five months ago in Lassa village.
“When they realised I was pregnant, they said I was impregnated by an
infidel, and we have killed him. Once you deliver, within a week we
will marry you to our commander,” she said, tears running down her
cheeks as she recalled her husband and lost children.
Musa gave birth to a curly-haired daughter the night before last week’s rescue.
As gunshots rang out, “Boko Haram came and told us they were moving
out and that we should run away with them. But we said no,” she said
from a bed in the camp clinic, a blanket wrapped around ankles so
swollen that each step had been agony.
“Then they started stoning us. I held my baby to my stomach and
doubled over to protect her,” she said, bending reflexively at the waist
as though she still had to shield her newborn.
She and another survivor of the stoning, 20-year-old Salamatu Bulama,
said several girls and women were killed, but they did not know how
many.
The horrors did not end once the military arrived.
A group of women were hiding under some bushes, where they could not
be seen by soldiers riding in an armoured personnel carrier, who drove
right over them.
“I think those killed there were about 10,” Bulama said.
Other women died from stray bullets, she said, identifying three by name.
There were not enough vehicles to transport all of the freed captives
and some women had to walk, Musa said. Those on foot were told to walk
in the tire tracks made by the convoy because Boko Haram militants had
mined much of the forest. But some of the women must have strayed
because a landmine exploded, killing three, she said.
Bulama shielded her face with her veil and cried when she thought
about another death: Her only son, a 2-year-old toddler who died two
months ago of an illness she said was aggravated by malnutrition.
“What will I tell my husband?” she sobbed after learning from other
survivors who used borrowed cell phones to try to trace relatives that
her husband was alive and in the northern town of Kaduna.
Musa, who had been in pain and withdrawn after her arrival the night
before, greeted a reporter with smiles on Sunday – and the news that her
breasts were finally giving milk and nourishment to her yet-to-be-named
daughter.
Another survivor, Binta Ibrahim, was 16-years-old and accompanying
her sister-in-law to the dressmaker when Boko Haram insurgents rode into
their village of Izghe, firing randomly at civilians. On that day in
February 2014, the AP reported at least 109 people were killed and
almost every hut destroyed as the militants lobbed firebombs onto their
thatch roofs.
Ibrahim, her sister-in-law and two of Ibrahim’s sisters were among scores of young women abducted.
Her two sisters escaped in the pandemonium that surrounded an air
raid, but Ibrahim, who was caring for three children she found abandoned
after the insurgents moved into the neighbouring village of Nbitha, did
not go with them.
“I had these three kids to care for and I couldn’t abandon them a second time,” she explained.
She described trekking for two days from Nbitha to Boko Haram’s
hideout in the Sambisa Forest with two-year-old Matthew and
four-year-old Elija Yohanna strapped to her back and four-year-old
Maryam Samaila clinging to her waist.
“They were so weak from lack of food that they couldn’t walk. There
was nothing to do but rest when I couldn’t take another step, and then
press ahead when I had recovered,” she said.
The children are Christian and Ibrahim is a Muslim. While Nigeria’s
northeastern Islamic insurgency has polarised many of Nigeria’s people
on religious lines, that was the last thing in Ibrahim’s big heart.
“I love them as if they are my own,” she said, striking her breast
with both fists to show the depth of her love for the children, who were
rescued with her and still remain in her care.
(The Telegraph)

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