Mail & Guardian

Rescued from Boko Haram, but still dying

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Nearly 700 people, most of them children, are receiving treatment in hospital in northeast Nigeria for severe malnutriti­on after being rescued from Boko Haram, the Borno state government said.

Sixty-one critically malnourish­ed people were among 478 children, including babies, 196 women and 23 men brought to the state capital Maiduguri from Bama on Monday, it said in a statement.

The infants were “undergoing medical care arising from extreme deprivatio­n of food”, Tuesday’s statement said, adding that the people were rescued after two years in captivity by the insurgents.

It was not i mmediately clear whether those taken to a special care unit had been brought from camps for internally displaced people in Bama.

Last week a civilian vigilante and a soldier based in Banki, 60km from Bama, spoke of how at least 10 people were “starving to death” every day.

Nigerian and internatio­nal relief agencies were working with internally displaced people in Bama but none appeared to be in Banki, which was recaptured from Boko Haram in September last year.

The vigilante said 376 people had been buried in the past three months and those still alive were like “walking corpses”. Lake Chad region.

About 6 500 children were found to be severely malnourish­ed at camps in Borno state last year and more than 25 000 others had “mild to moderate symptoms”, health officials said in February.

Nigeria’s government has been encouragin­g people to return to their homes as the military counterins­urgency regains territory from the Islamic State affiliate.

Last week, it signed an agreement with Cameroon for the return of 80 000 Nigerian refugees.

But farmlands in the mainly agricultur­al region have been devastated by the fighting, and homes and infrastruc­ture have been destroyed.

Shettima said on Tuesday he had ordered a new camp to be opened in Maiduguri for more than 10 000 people rescued from the countrysid­e around the towns of Marte and Mafa in recent days.

Unable to return home because of insurgent activity near their villages, people had been camped out under trees along the road from Maiduguri to Dikwa.

About 20 000 people have died and more than 2.6-million have been displaced since the Boko Haram conflict started in 2009. — AFP

 ?? Photo: Issouf Sanogo/AFP ?? Going nowhere: About 2.6-million people have been displaced by Boko Haram.
Photo: Issouf Sanogo/AFP Going nowhere: About 2.6-million people have been displaced by Boko Haram.

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