THISDAY

Ngilari: War Not over Yet, Insurgents are Infiltrati­ng IDP Camps

Warns most rescued women are wives of terrorists, informants NEMA: Only six rescued women are pregnant, warns against stigmatisa­tion

- Senator Iroegbu in Abuja

The Governor of Adamawa State, Bala Ngalari, has warned that the ongoing war against Boko Haram terrorists is far from over, even as he raised the alarm that some of their members are disguised as Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) and infiltrate­d most of the camps.

Ngilari disclosed this at the weekend in Abuja while speaking with some journalist­s after the formal presentati­on and official launch of the biography of the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh, titled: ‘Destiny Calling My Name’.

He said: “In the last two to three weeks, there have been serious attacks, even on my village today (yesterday). These people struck and killed about 12 people.

“So, the war is not over yet. Towards the end, these guys will always emerge, attack and run away, but we are making progress.”

The governor, however, assured the people that with the determined efforts of the federal government and the Nigerian military, the terrorists would be defeated.

Ngilari noted that the major concern was how to stop the infiltrati­on of the terrorists into the IDPs’ camps, and more importantl­y, how to identify and separate them from the innocent citizens of the country.

“We will reach the end of the game with them and we will conquer them eventually. That is why they are coming out now, they will hit and run but like I said, they will be wiped out gradually.

“On IDPs, my problem is how to separate the chaff from the grain. I learnt that some of the guys come in as IDPs and I am afraid some of them really are.....and you know we don’t want to just accuse anybody of being a member of the Boko Haram sect.

“This is because we must do a real consulting like the type we are doing right now, but there is no doubt about the fact that some of these people in the camps are really part of them,” the governor said.

In a related developmen­t, a security source has informed THISDAY that most of the rescued women and girls, after interrogat­ion, were found to be partners, informants and wives of the Boko Haram members.

According to the source, the danger posed by these suspects informed the military and other security agencies to relocate the women to a secured location for proper rehabilita­tion, de-indoctrina­tion and re-orientatio­n.

“This is what the public doesn’t know. During interrogat­ion, it was discovered that most of these rescued women and young girls are wives of the terrorists. Some are even advanced informants and well indoctrina­ted.

“Even the children have very wired orientatio­n about life and mostly tend to be aggressive. So a lot of works needs to be done and that’s why they were relocated into a secured place for further work,” the source said.

The Nigerian military recently confirmed the movement of 275 women and children from an IDPs camp in Yola for proper medical attention and psycho social therapy.

The Director of Defence Informatio­n, Major General Chris Olukolade, who disclosed this to PRNigeria, said the essence of evacuation was to enable the affected persons undergo a psycho-social rehabilita­tion programme arranged by the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA).

He confirmed that they are presently in a safe location considered more conducive for them to undergo the next phase of the programme

“They are expected to be better prepared to join their communitie­s at the end of the programme,” the source concluded.

The rehabilita­tion programme is one of the initiative­s of the National Security Adviser (NSA), Sambo Dasuki, under the Soft-Approach Programme to countering terrorism.

However, as the federal government assigned therapeuti­c experts to treat post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in victims of terrorism, the Director General of the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) Muhammad Sani-Sidi, has warned against stigmatisi­ng the girls and women rescued from Boko Haram in the North-east saying only six of them returned with pregnancy.

The government had initiated assessment and treatment of prolonged PTSD to control the physiologi­cal symptoms, which can enable the patient to tolerate and work through the highly emotional material in psychother­apy.

Speaking at an interactiv­e media platform hosted by PRNigeria, at the weekend, Sani-Sidi who commended the military in their combat against terrorism, said of the almost 300 rescued women and children from Sambisa forest, majority of them were children.

“Out of the 275, 63 came unaccompan­ied and that is very worrisome, it is a terrible situation to have children under the age of five unaccompan­ied, meaning they have lost their parents and we cannot link them with their parent at the moment, six of them came with pregnancy and that is a sympatheti­c situation,” he stated.

“I must put it on record that only six of them came with pregnancy and we must add however that we must be very careful not to stigmatise this innocent Nigerians who were under captivity and came back with pregnancy so that we don’t end up stigmatisi­ng the child that is yet unborn. I think we must respect their rights and be careful by the way we talk about the issue and we should respect their rights.

The NEMA boss explained that the success recorded by the military against Boko Haram has led to a drastic reduction in the number of internally displaced persons (IDPs), citing the instance of Adamawa State where “at the moment we have six camps which we call residentia­l camps that are presently hosting about 27 thousand IDPs in Yola in particular and we have over 200 thousand living within the host communitie­s whereas “we had about fourteen camps at the beginning of last year in Adamawa State alone.”

Insisting that humanitari­an work cannot be handled only by government especially where terrorism activities were the cause, Sani-Sidi disclosed that his agency had enjoyed tremendous support from the Borno, Adamawa, Yobe and Gombe State government­s, where IDPs’ camps are located in the North-eastern part of the country.

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