Daily Trust Saturday

Families mourn aid workers executed by Boko Haram

Buhari, UN, NGOs condemn killings

- Olatunji Omirin, Maiduguri

It was a bleak day for relatives and friends of five aid workers in Maiduguri, who were kidnapped and murdered by the dreaded Boko Haram sect. However, the worst seems not to be over yet as the insurgents issued a chilling reminder of its potency and threats to aid workers in the Northeast region.

However, Zara Tijjani, wife of the late Abdulrahma­n, who held her son in an embrace amidst family members, kept asking them the whereabout­s of her husband. “This is his son, where is my husband? Where is he?” Zara wept profusely

It was a pathetic scene when Daily Trust Saturday reporter visited the family of the late Abdulrahma­n Bulama, one of the aid workers recently murdered by insurgents in Maiduguri. Women and children were seen in the house, not too distant from the popular Fuzan overtank area of Maiduguri wailing uncontroll­ably, while the men sat on local mats looking forlorn, while waiting to observe the funeral prayer for the departed ones.

The late Abdulraham Bulama, who was preparing to marry a second wife, three days before his abduction, was in his late 30s and a desk officer at the State Emergency Management Agency in Monguno. He was one of the five humanitari­an workers forcefully taken away along Maiduguri/ Monguno highway by armed men believed to be insurgents.

The slain aid workers, though abducted separately, are Ishaku Yakubu of Action Against Hunger; Abdulrahma­n Dungus of Rich Internatio­nal; Luka Filibus, a child protection officer with the Aid Group Internatio­nal Rescue Committee (IRC); Joseph Prince, a security worker; and Abdulrahma­n Bulama, a SEMA camp coordinato­r.

They were said to have spent 52 days in the hands of their captors before they were finally executed on Wednesday.

Their deaths were publicized via a viral video released on Wednesday after purportedl­y failed negotiatio­ns between the parties involved, Daily Trust Saturday gathered.

In the viral video, one of the unidentifi­ed armed men speaking in Hausa said: “This is a message to the infidels who are using you to cheat and turn our people into unbeliever­s. You should know that your employers are just using you to achieve their aims, but they don’t care about you. That’s why whenever we abduct you, they don’t care about you.

“Our advice for you is that you should repent and turn to God, or else we shall continue to ambush and abduct you all in all the routes that you traverse. And if you don’t heed to our warning, what is about to happen to these five aid workers would also be the fate that will befall you too,” he concluded.

However, when Daily Trust Saturday approached the mother of late Abdulrahma­n, Hajja Umma Bulama, she looked very weak from continuous weeping and was surrounded by dozens of women who kept consoling her in Kanuri language, saying, “Please take heart Mama! Sorry.”

Hajja said: “May Allah grant him Jannah Firdausi, May Allah grant mercy on his grace. May he be forgiven the way he has always been comforting with a heart of God. May Allah have mercy on him.

“What happened to him is the will of Allah. And I thank the Almighty, I have no grudges against anyone. May Allah grant him paradise,” she added.

However, Zara Tijjani, wife of the late Abdulrahma­n, who held her son in an embrace amidst family members, kept asking them the whereabout­s of her husband.

“This is his son, where is my husband?

Where is he?” Zara wept profusely.

Also speaking, Aji Jidda Bulama, younger brother of the late Abdulrahma­n, said the family tried its best to secure the release of his late elder brother but he was utterly shocked when the news of his death broke.

“He is very popular and has been accepted by many people; his death came to us as a very rude surprise, I could not believe it,” he said.

“As a family, we are devastated, especially our mother. I felt bad when I heard the news. She was terribly touched by the story of his execution.

Also, when Daily Trust Saturday visited the home of another victim, 28-year-old Abdulrahma­n Dungus, who worked with Rich Internatio­nal before his death, his father Alhaji Dungus Ibrahim said the whole incident looked like a dream to him and he was yet to believe it.”

Alhaji Ibrahim said he was a farmer before they were chased away from their ancestral home - Monguno in 2014, to Bakassi IDPs camp where they are currently living.

He revealed that he spent more than 5 years in a displaced person’s camp with his family where they depended on nongovernm­ental organizati­ons’ aid to survive.

He revealed that his son Abdulrahma­n Dungus had been the strength of the family since he got the job with the NGO. “He had promised to be my sunshine, which he actually was, until his untimely death in the hands of his kidnapper.

“For two years now, Dungus had supported me and the family with the little he earned, he also took care of his siblings. I don’t know why this is happening to me. The last time I saw him was 42 days ago, when he left for Monguno and promised to come back a few weeks later. That was the last time I saw or heard from him,” he said.

“The whole thing still seems like a dream because he promised to wipe away my tears and take care of the family. We are confused but Allah knows the best,” Alhaji Dungus said.

Meanwhile, the execution of the aid workers has been widely condemned, both nationally and internatio­nally, as top government officials and internatio­nal organizati­ons pay visits and send condolence messages to the families of the deceased.

Governor Babagana Umara Zulum of Borno State, who is deeply pained by the insurgents’ execution of aid workers, has described them as heroes that were gruesomely killed in the course of serving humanity.

Zulum, in a statement on Thursday signed by the spokesman, Malam Isa Gusau, mourned the heroes and shared in the grief of their families and employers.

Governor Zulum who wants strongly desires an end to the senseless killings, said, “We cannot continue to do the same thing over and over and expect a different result.”

“The governor believes in a combinatio­n of kinetic and non-kinetic approaches and he is of the position that the Nigerian military has, through its ‘Operation Safe Corridor’, demonstrat­ed its willingnes­s to rehabilita­te and reintegrat­e insurgents willing to stop the killings of fellow humans,” the statement said.

Zulum, who was not in the state when the incident occurred, had directed a government delegation to visit families of the aid workers to participat­e in funeral activities and to pay condolence visits to affected humanitari­an partners through UNOCHA.

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 ?? Deputy Gov. Usman Khadafu with relatives of NGO worker in Maiduguri on Thursday ??
Deputy Gov. Usman Khadafu with relatives of NGO worker in Maiduguri on Thursday

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