The Star Late Edition

Rural areas told: You’re on your own

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BAMA: Nigeria’s government has a plan for the north-east, torn apart by eight years of conflict with Boko Haram: displaced people will be housed in fortified garrison towns, ringed by farms, with the rest of the countrysid­e effectivel­y left to fend for itself.

The vision for the state of Borno, ground zero for the war with the Islamist insurgency, is a stark admission of the reality in the north-east.

For two years, the military and government have said Boko Haram is all but defeated, and the remnants are being mopped up. But the military is largely unable to control territory beyond the cities and towns it has wrested back from Boko Haram.

That means many of the nearly 2 million displaced people across the north-east cannot return to their homes in rural areas.

Kashim Shettima, the governor of Borno state, said it was not possible for people to live in small villages.

“There’s beauty in numbers, there’s security in numbers. So our target is to congregate all the people in five major urban settlement­s and provide them with a means of livelihood, education, health care and of course security,” he told Reuters. “It’s a long-term solution, certainly.”

The plan for the eastern part of the state, centred on the town of Bama, is intended as a pilot scheme to be rolled out in other parts of Borno if it is successful.

Vigilantes, currently members of a group known as the Civilian Joint Task Force, will become agricultur­al rangers, the governor said.

Aided by Nigerian security forces, they will aim to secure and patrol a 5km radius around each garrison town where people can farm.

Peter Lundberg, UN Deputy Humanitari­an Co-ordinator for Nigeria, said the reconstruc­tion of Bama town, the second biggest in the state, was “logical”.

“People are very eager to go back if the conditions are right and if the conditions are safe, if the conditions are dignified, and of course it has to be voluntary.”

Sentiment among the displaced is mixed. Abubakar Goni, who lived outside Bama before fleeing to the Borno state capital Maiduguri, said he wants to return home; but, if the town is safer, he will agree to go there.

“I will support it as long as I will have a place to farm. I am also happy to hear the government will give us protection on the farm because I learnt Boko Haram men are still around.”

Others, like Tijja Modu Alhaji, are wary of potential disputes between residents of the towns where people will be sent and the returnees.

“I don’t want to stay in Bama because I will still be a stranger there, just as I am in Maiduguri now,” he said. “I want to go home, not to somebody else’s land.”

The governor’s plan is still in its early stages. It involves bringing back thousands of people who fled the town of Bama and the surroundin­g area and sought refuge in camps in Maiduguri and elsewhere.

Many of Bama’s buildings are still shells, windows smashed, doors ripped out and roofs gone. Telephone and electricit­y wires remain torn down, more than two years after the military evicted Boko Haram.

It is not clear how the returnees will be housed. There are already 15 000 people in a crowded camp for displaced local residents. The UN had planned to move them gradually to new shelters accommodat­ing 30 000 people, but the military said it could not oversee two camps there at the same time.

The government has announced plans to build 3000 homes in the Bama area. But there are concerns about how people sent to the town will manage, since many did not originally live there.

Aid workers said the demarcatio­n between garrison towns and a lawless countrysid­e means people have a choice: live in virtual quarantine, or return to their homes in the countrysid­e, where Boko Haram roam, and be treated by security forces as potential insurgency sympathise­rs.

Boko Haram’s recent attacks, including a suicide bombing that killed at least 50 in a mosque in Adamawa state last week, are the “last kicks of a dying horse,” Nigeria’s Informatio­n Minister Lai Mohammed said. On Saturday, suicide bombers killed at least 13 people in the town of Biu and injured 53 others.

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