Saturday, January 17, 2015

Teenager recounts seven-week ordeal in Boko Haram

The dream of pretty fifteen-year-old Abigail John, a senior
secondary two student of Government Day Secondary School,
Jang, Michika Local Government Area of Adamawa State, was
temporarily dashed on October 29, 2014 at 11.00am when the
dreaded Boko Haram terrorists attacked Mubi and caught her in
her house alongside others.
It will be recalled that after Mubi was overran by the terrorists, they
changed its name to Madinatul Islam (City of Islam).
In this telephone conversation with Sunday Vanguard, Abigail
recounts her ordeal.
Excerpts:
According to Abigail, the terrorists abducted her from her home
and took her alongside other victims to their hideout.
Corpses littered the ground: “As we were being taken to the place,
we saw so many corpses of men littering the ground. They took us
across the road to another house where we were kept. In the night,
they brought bread and drinks for us to eat for supper. There was
no serious event that night until the following day. In the morning,
we were given bread and other things for breakfast and later, they
cooked and served us. Thereafter, one of the Boko Harm members
started preaching Islam to us.”
Military intervention: “While this preaching was going on, a military
jet came in and dropped a bomb very close to the house. Moments
later, they dropped a second bomb which hit the building where we
were kept. When the aircraft was approaching to drop the second
bomb, the terrorists forced us into the main house while they
escaped. Only one of the terrorists was struck by the bomb, the
rest ran away. Some of the abducted people in the house – five
women and a child – died but most of the people were injured.
Those who were not affected by the bomb managed to escape.”
Treating the injured: Abigail was not lucky enough to escape as
she was injured. She continues: “I was among the injured so we
were put in Keke Napep (tricycles) and taken to a clinic. At the
clinic, I saw one woman whose leg was amputated, they gave her
anesthesia and sleeping tablets to reduce the pain and enable her
sleep. Various treatments were administered to the injured. We
were then taken to a house close to the clinic.”
Change of name: “The following day, October 31, we were served
breakfast and they did not try to Islamize those of us who were
injured although they kept preaching to us and changed our
names. My name was changed from Abigail to Zainab. Those who
were recaptured after the bomb blast that were not injured had to
do the ablutions and forced to profess Islam. Their names were
also changed. They made new attires and long scarves for each of
us. So we all had to wear that as a sign that we were living under
an Islamic caliphate.”
Relocation: “Because so many people (Boko Haram members) kept
coming to that house where we were kept, the Boko Haram
commanders decided it was not safe to leave us there so we were
relocated to another house, both the injured and those who were
recaptured in Mubi.
“We were taught how to recite some verses of the Koran. Those
who were slightly injured were taught how to say the Moslem
prayer five times a day.”
Terrorists flee: “On the first Sunday of December when the
terrorists got wind of the fact that soldiers were advancing towards
Mubi, the terrorists and some of their female members that came
along with the registered members ran away and left us in that
house. When some of the abducted ladies who were not injured
discovered that the terrorists were gone, they also escaped and left
those of us that were injured.”
It is said that what a man can do, a woman can do even better.
One of the female terrorists proved that to be true. According to
Abigail, while the men and other female terrorists escaped, one
female terrorist remained behind to guard the victims.
Said Abigail: “There was a female Boko Haram member who was
stubborn enough to stay back to guard us. She started relocating
some of the foodstuff in that house to another house. She also left
and locked us in so we could not leave the compound at all.”
Escape: “Two girls among us who were not too badly injured,
scaled the fence to go and report to the military that we were held
hostage in that house. That was how the military got to know that
there were people in the house. When those girls scaled the wall,
they saw a little boy passing by and convinced him to break the
door open for them before the military arrived. So after the boy got
the door open, we were able to send message to the soldiers and
informed them of our plight. We also informed the soldiers that a
Boko Haram woman had been guarding the house. Unfortunately,
the woman didn’t come back that day because she must have got
wind of the fact that soldiers had come around that area.
“A few days later, she felt the soldiers would not come back to the
place again so she came to see how we were faring. The soldiers
couldn’t move us out immediately because of our injuries. So they
arrested her and took her to the military base in Yola.”
“I have a broken arm and honestly, I don’t know how it got broken
but it was after the bomb attack that I discovered I had a broken
arm. While in captivity, the terrorists brought a traditional healer to
treat the hand. I have been in great pains,” said Abigail.
Abigail is now undergoing treatment with the help of the Catholic
Diocese of Yola.
Abigail counts herself somehow lucky as she noted that if not for
the injury, perhaps she would have been raped and taken to
Sambisa forest. “They surrounded the house where we were kept
but thank God, they did not rape us, especially those of us who
were captured in Mubi.”
Asked if she will want to go back to school, Abigail who wants to
become a lawyer and practise in Lagos or Abuja, said: “I am
scared to go back to Jang or Mubi but I want to continue my
education.”
Abigail’s mother: Mrs Rebecca John had this to say about her
daughter’s abduction and eventual escape: “I was not in town
when she was abducted. I had gone to see my sister in a nearby
town. My son, Lucky also got missing at the same time. He is
really lucky because he was found on January 7. Nobody knew his
whereabouts in the past eight weeks.”
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