Asabe Kwambura is getting tired of waiting. Sitting under a young mango tree alongside the charred remains of her school, the headteacher looks around nervously. It’s not safe to be out here in one of the most dangerous parts of north-eastern Nigeria, but the government has promised to send a team to investigate the kidnapping of more than 200 pupils from her school and she wants to greet them in person.
“These are our girls,” she
says. “They are from Chibok.” She punctuates her words by pointing to the
ground. “They are from here.”
Around her are abandoned desks and
burnt out classrooms destroyed when Boko
Haram militants stormed the Chibok government girls secondary school
a month ago, loading the girls into lorries and driving them away.
Kwambura’s face is drawn and tired.
The kidnapping has left its mark on everyone in this remote settlement, which
has been living under a state of emergency since Boko Haram stepped up its
attacks more than a year ago.
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Yerima Pudza, Asabe Kwambura and Bulama Modu sit under a tree at the campus of the government girls secondary school in Chibok where over 200 girls were kidnapped. Photograph: Chika Oduah |
Mohammed Dunoma, the chairman of the
local parent-teachers association, says many villagers are now reluctant to
allow their daughters to go to school. Boko Haram, whose name means “western
education is sinful”, is an ever-present threat, he says: “We don’t know when
they will come.”
This is a close-knit community, and
it is in mourning. Esther Yakubu’s 15-year-old daughter, Dorcas, is one of the
missing girls. She is furious with the government for failing to come to her
aid.
“What about us living in Chibok? Are
we not people too?” she asks. “They abandoned us. Just because we live in the
villages.” Asked if she believes the rumours that the girls may have crossed
the border into Cameroon and been forced to marry their abductors,
she shakes her head vehemently.
“No, no. They are in Nigeria,” she
says, holding a photo of Dorcas wearing a blue dress. The picture, taken the
day before she was kidnapped, was supposed to be a gift to Dorcas for
completing secondary school.
Away from Chibok, the social media campaign to #bringbackourgirls has generated more than one million tweets and swelled into a global outcry, with famous figures including Angelina Jolie, Malala Yousafzai and Michelle Obama joining the calls for Nigeria’s government to recover the remaining girls.
But here there is no electricity or
internet access, and little awareness that the world’s attention is focused at
its door. The oldest man in the village,
Bitrus Dawa, known locally as Badalu, has not heard about the global search
effort for the girls he describes as “my daughters”. Dawa, who says he was born
in 1910 and can remember the first time he saw white men in 1923, shakes his
head as he laments a government “fraught with corruption” that has not been
able to eliminate Boko Haram.
Beyond the village, the wide trunks
of baobab trees cast shadows across the Sahelian landscape where the Sambisa game reserve stretches
ominously. Many Chibok residents believe their daughters are in one of Boko
Haram’s encampments in the Sambisa bush.
“We went inside the Sambisa to look
for them,” says Lawan Zanna. Hoping to find his 18-year-old daughter Aisha, the
45-year-old father of nine said he had joined more than 100 others three days
after the abduction. Along the way, villagers from nearby areas told them they
had seen Boko Haram militants with the girls.
Zanna said he wanted to continue
following the abductors’ tracks, “But they told us told us, ‘don’t follow them.
They will kill you’.”
Despite Boko Haram’s threats, Zanna
says he will keep his seven daughters in school. “Even the Qur’an tells us that
knowledge is obligatory.”
Since the abduction, Chibok’s local
government has introduced a curfew, outlawing all driving after 6pm. The village has deployed its own
civilian force of fighters to defend the area. Bulus Mungo Park, a 38-year-old
civil servant who says two of his nieces are among the kidnapped, is one of
them. A volunteer in the national vigilante association, Mungo Park says the
local force is about 300 strong. “We must fight this Boko Haram and we will
win,” he says.
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Bulus Mungo Park is a volunteer vigilante fighter defending Chibok. Photograph: Chika Oduah |
The journey to Maiduguri from Chibok
is an 80-mile (130km) stretch of abandoned villages razed by Boko Haram’s
insurgency. Drivers on this road are careful to avoid stopping between the
regular military checkpoints inspecting all passers by. At the checkpoints,
soldiers and civilian fighters call out suspicious-looking men and ask them to
stand in a line. One by one they lift the men’s fingers, looking for tell-tale
signs of heavy gun usage.
“This is the situation we are in now
because of the Boko Haram,” says Mungo Park.
Source: Guardian UK
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