A woman has told how Boko Haram turned her
into a ‘sex machine’ as it is revealed 214 among a group of 500 women
and girls rescued from the militants have returned pregnant. Asabe Aliyu is a 23-year-old mother of four children from Delsak, a village near Chibok town in northeastern Nigeria.
She was abducted from her village six
months ago when it was overrun by Boko Haram and taken to the
extremist’s stronghold in the Sambisa Forest.
After a series of sexual assaults on her
by different men committed day after day, she was forced into marrying
one of the fighters. ‘They turned me into a sex machine. They took
turns to sleep with me. Now, I am pregnant and I cannot identify the
father.
‘With my condition as a pregnant woman, I did the cooking of their food.’
Among a group of 534 girls rescued from
Boko Haram 214 are pregnant and many are living with the horror of
carrying their rapists’ babies.
Like Asabe, many were treated as ‘sex
slaves’ by the militants and arrived starving and traumatised at
makeshift army and government camps after trekking through the bush for
up to two days.
They had been held in the Sambisa Forest
before government forces moved in and the extremists fled, leaving
hundreds of women to fend for themselves.
Around 700 have been freed from the clutches of the terror group in recent weeks.
They had been held in horrendous conditions after being abducted by Nigeria’s homegrown Islamic extremists.
The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA)
has been providing counselling and support to 534 of these women in
Borno and Adamawa states and found 214 of them to be visibly pregnant.
‘They were denied food and denied sleep.
They were used almost as slaves. They were forced to cook for the Boko
Haram fighters and look after them. Sometimes they were used as sex
slaves.
‘At least 214 have been made pregnant and there are stories of rape.’
It is not yet clear how many of these are carrying babies by militants.
Dr Osotimehin said: ‘I am a Nigerian as
well and I will tell you this much – for a woman to claim that she has
been raped, in my country, is one of the most difficult things.post by expdonaloaded.blogspot.com
‘When they actually do so I want to
believe them. We are looking after them to give them all the support
they need so that they can go through and have a normal delivery.
‘What’s going to happen then is for them
to decide. I think they are so upset, the girls. They require social and
psychiatric support because it’s affected them very deeply.
‘I don’t know what Boko Haram want to get
out of it. What I think is going on is that they are using women and
women’s bodies as weapons of war and weapons of oppression and that
business model is not only with Boko Haram, it’s also with ISIS.
‘They see it as a means of advancing their cause and getting the attention of the world.’
The Malkohi camp outside the city of Yola
is now home to 293 women and children who were brought in last weekend
after being rescued on April 28.
Not only have they endured being uprooted
from their homes at the point of a gun but they have lost husbands,
children and other family members, sometimes killed in front of them.
Militants stoned about 10 women to death
for refusing to flee with them, several were accidentally crushed by an
armored personnel carrier and three died when they triggered a land
mine.
It is unclear if those rescued include the
so-called ‘Chibok girls’ captured from a boarding school in Chibok town
more than a year ago. Dozens escaped but 219 remain missing.post by expdonaloaded.blogspot.com
Lami Musa, 27, cradled her five-day-old baby girl as the militants carried out the brutal stoning
She was in the first group of 293 rescued
women and girls to be transported by road over three days to the safety
of the Malkohi refugee camp on the outskirts of Yola, the capital of
Adamawa state.
Musa a gave birth to a curly-haired daughter the night before being rescued.
She told Associated Press: ‘Boko Haram
came and told us they were moving out and that we should run away with
them. But we said no.
‘Then they started stoning us. I held my baby to my stomach and doubled over to protect her.
‘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 realized 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.
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, 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
neighboring 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 2-year-old
Matthew and 4-year-old Elija Yohanna strapped to her back and 4-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.
Nigerian troops rescued 25 more children and women from Boko Haram early Wednesday
Many militants were killed in ‘a fierce
encounter’ that cost the life of one soldier and wounded five, Col. Sani
Usman said in a statement.
A three-month-old multinational offensive has driven Boko Haram from towns where it had declared an Islamic caliphate.
The militants have retreated into the vast Sambisa Forest, where they have planted land mines to impede attacks.
‘Our troops are unrelenting in their determined efforts of vanquishing Boko Haram terrorists wherever they are,’ Usman said.
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