The National - News

Kindness wears thin in Nigeria

One million people flooded the capital of Borno state to escape Boko Haram since 2009. Residents took many of them in but have since grown weary of the burden

-

MAIDUGURI // Ali Bukar did not know anyone when he arrived in Maiduguri with 43 people in tow and not a coin in his pocket.

Mr Bukar was fleeing the murders of civilians by Boko Haram in north-east Nigeria, taking his wives, his sons, their wives and grandchild­ren with him.

They slept in a car park “until a man took pity on us”, he said.

About a million people have flooded the capital of Borno state to escape the insurgency that Boko Haram has waged since 2009.

The camps set up for the displaced are not sufficient, so many residents of Maiduguri opened their doors to these victims of conflict.

But now, years later, the refugees still cannot return to their homes, and struggling city residents are starting to blame the influx for problems in the community.

Between 70 and 90 per cent of the displaced in Maiduguri have relied on the compassion of the local people to survive. Mr Bukar and his family have never stayed at a camp. He said a merchant welcomed them into his home and fed them for a year, but then they had to leave because the financial burden became too much.

Today, the family is living in a so-called hosting community, one of hundreds of such private places where refugees are sheltered around the city.

“I couldn’t just sit there and watch people die of hunger, I had to help them,” says Baba Kura Al Kahi, a local businessma­n who heads these hosting communitie­s. He made his fortune in real estate and turned over some of his land to the displaced in 2013. Today, many refugees are squatters on constructi­on sites, in schools and in public housing, while thousands of others are taken in by relatives or members of their ethnic group, often Kanuri or Hausa. Neighbours have organised aid, growing food for the most needy, bringing them clothes and sheets and cooking utensils.

“Resources are overstretc­hed, especially with regards to water and sanitation, with regards to hospital facilities, with regards to even food security issues,” said Kashim Shettima, the governor of Borno.

Still, after years of being under siege, Maiduguri has a semblance of normal life compared with the Borno’s devastated hinterland.

The city’s curfew has been pushed back four hours to 10pm.

Soldiers and checkpoint­s are less noticeable and traders and pedestrian­s have returned to the city centre streets. The schools, which were closed for two years, reopened last month.

Over the past year, Nigerian president Muhammadu Buhari’s government has said repeatedly that Boko Haram is close to being defeated.

Mr Shettima considers the battle “over” and predicts that hun- dreds of thousands of displaced people will have returned to their homes by May.

But Borno is the cradle of Boko Haram and the group has not disappeare­d. Last weekend, a suicide bombing at Maiduguri’s busy market resulted in the killing of one person and injured 18 others. The two bombers were girls thought to be seven or eight years old, a hallmark of the extremist group, which often uses women or girls in such operations, especially in Borno.

The insurgency has ravaged the economy of the region. Unemployme­nt is about 35 per cent or more, according to Borno’s governor. In the streets of Maiduguri, the number of beggars in rags who bang on the windscreen­s of the cars stopped at red lights has mushroomed.

The city’s ills are now being blamed on the refugees who have flooded Maiduguri and doubled its population since the Boko Haram revolt began.

More than 20,000 people have been killed in the insurgency and 2.6 million displaced in northern Nigeria.

The city’s governor said the displaced camps “are the source of many problems”, including networks for prostituti­on and drug traffickin­g.

“The residents helped as much as they could, but now, they are more and more critical,” says a journalist in Maiduguri who requested anonymity. “The people are afraid of the crime and epidemics that can arise.”

Yannick Pouchalan, director of Action against Hunger in Nigeria, says “it is clear that Maiduguri cannot offer a decent life to all these people”.

But compared to the villages, the refugees, especially the youth, find the city has more to offer.

“If you are 15 and you can take advantage of the security, the services of a big city and have access to the internet, you’re surely not going to go back home to your village,” Mr Pouchalan says.

 ?? Stefan Heunis / AFP ?? A displaced persons camp in Borno state. Towns that were once bustling hubs were razed by Boko Haram while others opened their doors to refugees but patience is wearing thin.
Stefan Heunis / AFP A displaced persons camp in Borno state. Towns that were once bustling hubs were razed by Boko Haram while others opened their doors to refugees but patience is wearing thin.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates