Toronto Star

Women allegedly raped after their rescue from Boko Haram

Amnesty Internatio­nal claims Nigerian military abused victims

- SAM OLUKOYA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NIGERIA— Nigerian soldiers and self-defence forces have raped women who were rescued from the Boko Haram extremist group, Amnesty Internatio­nal alleged in a new report Thursday that Nigeria’s military swiftly dismissed as “false.”

The report alleges that thousands of women and girls were separated from their families in camps in northeaste­rn Nigeria and abused. Some were raped in exchange for food and others were beaten and called “Boko Haram wives,” the report says.

The report is the latest allegation of human rights abuse by Nigeria’s security forces as they try to combat the Islamic extremist group that has displaced millions of people over the years and killed or abducted tens of thousands.

The Amnesty Internatio­nal report, based on more than 250 interviews as recently as April, says the alleged abuses occurred as Nigeria’s military pushed to reclaim territory from Boko Haram starting in 2015.

Thousands of civilians freed during the operations were ordered into displaceme­nt camps where thousands of people died between late 2015 and late 2016 from lack of food, water and health care, the human rights group says. That situation improved once aid groups began raising the alarm. “Many of these women and men said that they had suffered brutally under Boko Haram and were hoping to be rescued, only to find themselves attacked by the military,” the report says. “Women have been affected in disproport­ionate and gender-specific ways.”

Nigeria’s government rejected the Amnesty report as “short on credibilit­y,” while the military in a separate statement called it part of a “malicious trend” by the human rights group.

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