Cape Times

More Nigerian girls forced to become ‘human bombs’

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THE UN Children’s Fund (Unicef) is concerned about the increase in the use of children, especially girls, as “human bombs” in Nigeria.

Since the beginning of January, 83 children have been used as so-called human bombs, 55 being girls, most of them often under 15 years old, according to Unicef spokespers­on Marixie Mercado.

The 27 other children were boys and one was an infant strapped to a girl.

The number of children used so far this year is four times higher than what it was for all of 2016.

“Children used as human bombs are, above all, victims, not perpetrato­rs,” Mercado said.

She said the use of children in such attacks created suspicion and fear of children released, rescued, or escaped from Boko Haram.

“They face rejection when they try to reintegrat­e into their communitie­s which compounds their suffering,” she said.

Mercado painted a dire picture, describing the situation as a massive displaceme­nt and malnutriti­on crisis – “a deadly combinatio­n for children”. She said a significan­t percentage of the persons displaced by the insurgenci­es in north-east Nigeria are children with the vast majority of them in Borno state, where most of those attacks are taking place.

North-east Nigeria is also one of four countries or regions facing the spectre of famine, with up to 450 000 children at risk of severe acute malnutriti­on this year, according to Unicef.

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