YOLA, Nigeria — Rose Wakulu is exhausted. Yet the 25-year-old sits
upright on a wooden chair in an abandoned school classroom,
breastfeeding her 28-day-old nephew Ibrahim. Boko Haram fighters killed
his mother and twin on the day he was born.
At Wakulu’s feet sits 5-year-old Moses Luka, the son of another of
Wakulu’s sisters.
Moses is putting dirty plastic bottle tops in his
mouth. Two of them get stuck, and he tries to cough them out. Wakulu
bends down over Ibrahim’s head and sticks a finger in Moses’ mouth to
pry out the plastic tops. When she forces them out, they fly into the
air, landing on the other side of a pile of rusty chairs. He runs after
his makeshift toys.
Wakulu’s daughter, 2-year-old Ladi, trails after Moses. They arrived
the day before, and are still getting used to living in the camp.
In December, Boko Haram fighters attacked Wakulu’s village, Lassa, in neighboring Borno state.
Moses’ mother was killed outside his family’s home while he was
inside with his father. When Moses’ father went out to try to bury his
wife’s body, the fighters returned and killed him too. Moses was still
inside the house.
Wakulu and Ladi were hiding in the bush with a group of people who
had fled the killing spree. Leaving Ladi behind, she sneaked out to go
to the home of another sister, who had stayed behind because she was
heavily pregnant. Wakulu entered through the gates and found her sister
lying in the dirt, blood still spilling from her body.
Wakulu heard the cry of babies. She ran into the house and saw
newborn twins lying on their backs on the floor. One was murdered,
covered in blood; the other, now named Ibrahim, was crying. She quickly
buried the dead infant and her sister. Then she picked up the crying
baby. She ran through the village to the home of her second sister,
where she saw her and her husband’s bodies. She grabbed Moses by his
hand and returned to Ladi.
With Ibrahim strapped on her back, Wakulu, Moses and Ladi crawled
through the bush with dozens of other terrified villagers. They walked
from village to village, nearly 150 miles, until she could no longer
feed the baby and Moses was too tired to walk. After 12 days, the four
reached the state capital, Yola.
But the horror of what they escaped still haunts Wakulu.
“When I saw Boko Haram, I vomited,” she said, speaking in the Hausa
language. “They were wearing Nigerian army uniforms, but they had
turbans on their heads, so that was how I knew they were not soldiers.”
Wakulu, Ladi, Ibrahim and Moses are now in a state government-run
camp called Girei One, where more than a thousand internally displaced
people live. Because the camp is a transition unit where the displaced
are eventually relocated to more permanent camps, no one has an accurate
idea of how many orphans have passed through Girei One. But it’s clear
that many children are at the camp without their parents.
Jummai Joshua, a petite and curious 8-year-old, is one of them. She’s
at the camp with her grandmother. Jummai’s mother died in childbirth
years ago. Her father was killed by Boko Haram fighters weeks earlier
when they invaded their town.
Jummai and her grandmother hid in the fields for days. In the
mornings, Jummai played with seeds falling from the trees and blades of
dried grasses. One morning, her grandmother sneaked back to the village
for food and saw Jummai’s father’s body on a path to his farmland.
“My father — I just cried,” Jummai says. She looks down. Her grandmother looks away.
For more than five years Boko Haram, which aims to create a state in
northeastern Nigeria ruled by its version of Sharia, has committed
atrocities across the region.
According to Amnesty International, at least 2,000 people were feared dead
after a massive January attack in the far northeastern town of Baga
near Lake Chad in Borno. The Nigerian military put the death toll at
150. The group has extended its reach, executing its first attack in the
neighboring country of Chad last week.
Due to lack of access to areas controlled by the fighters and
conflicting reports from witnesses and the Nigerian government, no one
knows just how many people are killed in Boko Haram attacks. The U.N.
High Commissioner for Refugees estimates that more than 1.5 million
people have been displaced. It’s unknown how many of these refugees are
children whose parents are dead or missing.
“It’s a downfall for Nigeria,” said community health worker Ahmed
Ulenda. “These kids are losing their parents, and the president of
Nigeria has not come here to console these orphans.”
Ulenda has treated a number of orphans who had fallen sick during a
recent measles outbreak in Girei One Camp. He monitors their physical
health. But the mental health of these children has received almost no
attention. He sighs and says, “We do psychosocial counseling. We give
them a brief talk. We tell them to forget about everything. We tell them
God will take care of them.”
Yola-based psychologist Hasan Mubi is worried about the minimal care
given to the mental state of children who have been directly affected by
Boko Haram.
He said the situation is “beyond the state’s capacity to handle,” and
a more communal and comprehensive approach must be administered in
offering mental health care for the children. He and a group of
lecturers from the Federal College of Education in Yola have
collaborated to offer such services. They are conducting a survey to
create a database of unaccompanied minors in a camp in the Damare area
of Yola. More than 6,000 people displaced by Boko Haram have set up
temporary lives here, making it the largest camp in the state.
Mubi estimates that Boko Haram's campaign of violence has left nearly
half a million children without their parents. In Damare camp in
Adamawa he says there are more than 500 such unaccompanied minors and
that it’s hard to tell which ones are orphaned and which ones don’t know
if there parents are alive after being separated from them while
fleeing Boko Haram.
In either case, he said these children often display signs of trauma, such as aggressive behavior and inability to sleep.
“They are experiencing stress from being in a new environment. This is a temporary life. What happens after this?”
Hauwa Marshall, 11, and her sister Fatimatu, 13, sleep in a small
square room with dozens of others. Eleven floral-print mattresses are
stacked on top of a metal-framed bunk bed. Hauwa and Fatimatu are
orphans. They were fetching water when Boko Haram members stormed
through in a convoy of motorbikes. The fighters killed their father.
Their mother was already dead.
Hausa is lively and smiles freely. Fatimatu is meek and introverted.
Her sister is her only friend in the camp. She says she’s too shy to
make new friends. Fatimatu often feels like wandering off and being
alone, but it’s hard to do that in an overcrowded camp. She says no one
ever asks her how she feels.
Mubi said that if children are not given proper mental attention,
they could become a problem in society. He compared the situation to the
level of psychological trauma that children who lived during the 1994
genocide in Rwanda experienced, saying that children living through Boko
Haram’s insurgency have been forced to see similar violent murders.
“It’s likely that the next 20 to 30 years, we will see violent
behavior arising from these youth and children,” he says. “Whatever
steps you take now can correct the future now. Our intervention may not
have immediate effects.”
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