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They Fled Their Homes to Escape Boko Haram. Now, Despite Their Fears, Nigeria Is Resettling Them Back.

They Fled Their Homes to Escape Boko Haram. Now, Despite Their Fears, Nigeria Is Resettling Them Back.
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DAMASAK, Nigeria — When Boko Haram began its insurgency in northeastern Nigeria in 2010, Abdulhameed Salisu packed his bags and fled his hometown of Damasak in the troubled Borno state.

The 45-year-old father of seven came back with his family early last year. They are among thousands of Nigerians taken back from displacement camps to their villages, hometowns or newly built settlements known as “host communities” under a resettlement program that analysts say is being rushed to suggest the conflict with the Islamic militants is nearly over.

Across Borno, dozens of displacement camps have been shut down, with authorities claiming they are no longer necessary and that most areas from which people fled are now safe.

But many of the displaced say it’s not safe to go back.

Boko Haram — Nigeria’s homegrown jihadis — took up arms in 2009 to fight against Western education and impose their radical version of Islamic law, or Sharia. The conflict, now Africa’s longest struggle with militancy, has spilled into Nigeria’s northern neighbors. Some 35,000 civilians have been killed and more than 2 million have been displaced in the northeastern region, according to U.N. numbers. The 2014 kidnapping of 276 schoolgirls by Boko Haram in the village of Chibok in Borno state — the epicenter of the conflict — shocked the world. Borno state alone has nearly 900,000 internally displaced people in displacement camps, with many others absorbed in local communities. So far this year, at least 1,600 civilians have been killed in militant attacks in Borno state, according to the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project, a U.S.-based nonprofit.

UN's plan for the North East | The Guardian Nigeria News - Nigeria and World News — Opinion — The Guardian Nigeria News – Nigeria and World NewsIDP Camp in Northeast Nigeria.

And in a state where at least 70% of the population relies on agriculture, dozens of farmers have also been killed or kidnapped from their farmland by the extremists in the last year. In May, hundreds of hostages, mostly women and children who were held captive for months or years by Boko Haram were rescued from a forest enclave and handed over to authorities. In September, at least 100 villagers were killed by suspected Boko Haram militants who opened fire on a market, on worshippers and in people’s homes in the Tarmuwa council area of the neighboring Yobe state, west of Borno.

Analysts warn that a forced resettlement could endanger the local population as there is still inadequate security across the hard-hit region.

Salisu says he wastes away his days in a resettlement camp in Damasak, a garrison town in Borno state of about 200,000 residents, close to the border with Niger.

Food is getting increasingly difficult to come by and Salisu depends on handouts from the World Food Program and other aid organizations. He longs to find work.

“We are begging the government to at least find us a means of livelihood instead of staying idle and waiting for whenever food comes,” he said.

They fled their homes to escape Boko Haram. Now Nigeria is resettling them back despite their fears - The Press Democrat Abdulhameed Salisu, a 45-year-old father of seven who was displaced by Islamist extremist attacks, waits to receive food donations from the United Nations World Food Program in Damasak, northeastern Nigeria, Sunday, Oct. 6, 2024. (AP Photo/Chinedu Asadu) 

On a visit last week to Damasak, Cindy McCain, the WFP chief, pledged the world would not abandon the Nigerian people as she called for more funding to support her agency’s aid operations. “We are going to stay here and do the very best we can to end hunger,” McCain told The Associated Press as she acknowledged the funding shortages. “How do I take food from the hungry and give it to the starving,” she said.

Resettlement typically involves displaced persons being transported by military trucks back to their villages or “host communities.” The Borno state government has promised to provide essentials to help returnees integrate into these areas, with support from aid organizations.

The government argues that the displacement camps are no longer sustainable.

“What we need now are durable solutions,” Borno Governor Babagana Zulum told McCain during her visit. As the resettlement got underway, one in five displaced persons stayed back in Maiduguri, the Borno state capital, and nearby towns but were left without any support for local integration, the Global Protection Cluster, a network of non-government organizations and U.N. agencies, said last December.

Those Who Returned Are Suffering”: Impact of Camp Shutdowns on People Displaced By Boko Haram Conflict in Nigeria | HRWA woman carries her belongings at the Bakassi camp in Maiduguri, Nigeria on November 30, 2021, as residents vacate the camp ahead of the Borno State government’s closure of all internally displaced person camps. © 2021 Audu Marte / AFP via Getty Images.

Many others have crossed the border to the north, to settle as refugees in neighboring Niger, Chad or Cameroon. The three countries have registered at least 52,000 Nigerian refugees since January 2023, according to the U.N. refugee agency — nearly twice the number registered in the 22 months before that.

The International Crisis Group warned earlier this year that the rushed closure of displacement camps and forced resettlement puts displaced people at risk again, as militants remain active in their home areas. This situation may force them to “cut deals” with jihadists to farm or fish. Such compromises could allow extremists to strengthen their presence in these regions.

Boko Haram, which split into two main factions in 2016, continues to ambush security convoys and raid villages. Abubakar Kawu Monguno, head of the Center for Disaster Risk Management at the University of Maiduguri, said the government needs to intensify its military campaign to either eliminate the militants or force them to surrender.

After not being able to access their farms because of rampant attacks by militants, some farmers in Damasak and other parts of Mobbar district returned to work their land last year, armed with seedlings provided by the government. Salisu was one of them.

Then a major flood struck in September, collapsing a key dam and submerging about 40% of Maiduguri’s territory. Thirty people were killed, and more than a million others were affected, authorities said. Farms that feed the state, including Salisu’s, were destroyed. His hopes for a successful rice harvest were washed away, and now he relies on food handouts at a Damasak food hub.

Rumors Of Boko Haram Attack Send Nigerian Refugees Fleeing Again : Parallels : NPRCivilians displaced by Boko Haram sit at a camp near Yola, the capital of northeast Nigeria’s Adamawa state.

“Since Boko Haram started, everything else stopped here,” he said. “There is nothing on the ground and there are no jobs.”

Maryam Abdullahi also stood in line at a WFP hub in Damasak with other women, waiting for bags of rice and other food items she desperately needs for her family of eight, including her youngest child, who is 6 years old.

The donations barely last halfway through the month, she said, but she still waited in the scorching heat. Whatever little money she has goes toward buying yams to fry and sell to support her family, but it’s not nearly enough. Her only wish is to get a “proper job” so she and her children can feel safe.

“We either eat in the morning for strength for the rest of the day or … we eat only at night,” Abdullahi said.

      Image  Women and villagers wait to receive food donations from the United Nations World Food Program in Damasak, northeastern Nigeria, Sunday, Oct. 6, 2024. (AP Photo/Chinedu Asadu)

(Associated Press reporter Haruna Umar in Maiduguri, Nigeria, contributed to this report.)

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Adebukola Adeagbo
Adebukola Samuel Adeagbo is a dedicated news reporter with AfrikTimes, known for his versatility in various news reporting and investigative journalism.

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