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Four-year-old boy relates tale of horror in Boko Haram captivity

Editor’s Note:  Boko Haram’s campaign of murderous terror has left thousands of victims in its wake.  Often, children are the most scarred and damaged by the Islamists’ hatred.  One four-year-old child has spoken to the Premium Times of the horror he endured and how the nightmares continue to plague him.  Read his heartbreaking words.

Alkassim Muhammad, a 4-year-old victim of Boko Haram insurgency in North East Nigeria, fled from Bama in Borno state to Kaduna state.

It takes about 10 hours to drive the 817 km from Borno to Kaduna.

The kid is believed to have trekked for weeks, or even months, to cover that distance.

Muhammad is among 72 Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) currently at a camp in Maraban Jos, along the Kaduna-Zaria road.

The boy is so traumatized by his experience with Boko Haram that he runs and hides whenever he sees or hears the sound of a motorcycle.

boko haram

Boko Haram remains committed to destruction and death

He cries ‘Boko Haram! Boko Haram! Boko Haram!’ each time he catches a glimpse of a motorcycle, his handlers at the IDPs camp said.

Muhammad was noticed by journalists when the Chairman, Kaduna State Council of the Nigeria Union of Journalists, Garba Muhammad, accompanied by other journalists, visited the camp recently to donate food items.

Rabi Ibrahim, founder of Arrrida Relief Foundation Nigeria, established the camp, including a primary school within it, for people like little Muhammad who were victims of the insurgency.

Ms Ibrahim converted the houses she inherited from her late mother into the camp.

She said Muhammad was in Boko Haram’s captivity for eight months, and that the boy had witnessed the slaughter of adults and children.

READ ALSO:  Breaking – Nigerian military uncovers fresh Boko Haram plot

“Up till now his two sisters are still in Boko Haram captivity. His father died of heart attack when he got tired of running from Boko Haram during several attacks on their Bama community in Borno state,” she said.

Most children in the camp, some of them between the ages of two and 10 years, were said to have trekked through thick forest for seven days, without food or water. They reportedly survived by drinking each other’s urine, before they were discovered.

“Many of them were brought to the camp very sick, and there is no week that will pass by without us taking them to Garden City hospital, Kaduna for treatment of one ailment or the other,” Ms Ibrahim said.

“Just recently, our coordinators asked us to send N2, 000 for transportation to Kaduna for a 10-year-old whose parents were killed in Bama, and her extended family and relatives rejected her due to their severe poverty level.

boko haram

Thousands of children have been forced into IDP camps due to Boko Haram

“Our major challenge is lack of food and funds for the basic educational needs of these innocent kids. I can cater for 1,000 for three months if I have access to at least N1million.

“I have ejected tenants in another house in Maraban Jos which I also inherited from my mother. The houses used to generate over N1 million income. (But) I had to forfeit it, and turned the place to hostel for some of IDPs who were sleeping in make-shift tents under the bridges,” she said.

Ms Ibrahim thanked the NUJ for the visit, and appealed to other Nigerians and government officials to visit IDP camps so as to give a sense of belonging to many persons that are traumatized.

“Even though I prefer children because I have only vacancy for nursery and primary school, but I still cater for adults, youths and orphans, especially those affected by past crises in Kaduna.

READ ALSO:  Breaking – Boko Haram kills 32 soldiers in Niger Republic

“We don’t call it orphanage or IDP camp, we call it children school. My own two little children also attend, sleep and eat in the same room and bowl with the other kids.

“My husband has been a support and encouragement, despite his critical health challenge, and I remain very grateful to him,” she added.

She said a carton of noodles is usually cooked for a single day for the kids, while a bag of rice lasts for four days, supplemented with beans and spaghetti.

“We spend N2,000 on water at school, everyday, because we do not have the funds to construct borehole,” she said.

READ ALSO:  Just in – Troops raid Boko Haram terrorists, kill one

The NUJ Chairman, Mr Muhammad, while presenting the food items, said Ms Ibrahim was a woman with big heart who needs the support and encouragement of everyone to provide care for the IDPs.

Mr Muhammad said attention should also be given to similar camps at Rigasa, Kauta village, Barakallahu, and Gadan Gayan.

He commended the military and other security agencies for their resolve to fight insecurity in the country.

The post Four-year-old boy relates tale of horror in Boko Haram captivity appeared first on Nigeria News today & Breaking news | Nigerian newspapers.


Four-year-old boy relates tale of horror in Boko Haram captivity Reviewed by Olusola Bodunde on 06:21 Rating: 5

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