Nearly seven years since Boko Haram militants kidnapped two
of his daughters from their school in northeastern Nigeria, a hurried phone
call let Ali Maiyanga know that his family’s ordeal might soon be over.
The call on Thursday evening 28 January was from Maiyanga’s
daughter Halima, who – along with her sister Maryam – was among more than 200
schoolgirls snatched by Boko Haram insurgents in Chibok in April 2014, sparking
a global #BringBackOurGirls campaign.
“I was crying, she was crying,” said Maiyanga, who was
preparing to get married to his fourth wife when he heard Halima’s voice down
the line.
“We couldn’t talk long because I was surrounded by so many people and the place was noisy. Everybody started jumping up and down when I told them,” said Maiyanga, father of 18 children, who was reunited with his other kidnapped daughter in 2016.
Halima, 23, told him she had been rescued by the Nigerian
army, but Maiyanga said he did not know her exact whereabouts or if she was
alone or with more of her kidnapped former classmates.
An army spokesman said on Monday the army did not have any
Chibok kidnap victims in its custody and the government has not issued a
statement about any of the missing women being found in recent days.
About half of the students who were abducted have escaped or
been released so far.
Dozens have appeared in propaganda videos by the militants –
showing them pleading for their rescue or pledging allegiance to the group –
and some have died from illness, in childbirth or military air strikes,
according to freed captives.
Reports by Boko Haram’s victims of religious indoctrination
and forced marriages have fueled concerns about the remaining women as attacks
by Islamist militants gather pace in the northeast of the country.
Maryam, 24, said she and Halima – who were among the few
Muslims kidnapped along with their mostly Christian classmates – were held
captive together at first before they both married insurgents in 2014 and moved
into different parts of the forest.
Maryam’s husband decided to help his wife escape because he
did not want their son to grow up in the forest, and she was found with their
10-month-old baby by troops in the Gwoza district of Borno State in November
2016.
“I always believed I would see my sister again one day,”
Maryam told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. “When I heard the news, I was
jumping up and down. I was very happy. I can’t wait to see her.”
After the two sisters got married, they saw each other
regularly. Halima used to visit Maryam every month, helping her to care for the
baby. Maryam said she used to spend a lot of time consoling her sister after
she had a stillbirth.
But when her escape was planned, Maryam did not tell her
sister.
“I was afraid. I didn’t see her before I left,” said Maryam,
who does not know the whereabouts of her husband since he was arrested by the
military at the time of her escape. He had accompanied her out of the forest.
Since then, Maryam and the other freed Chibok girls were
enrolled by the government in a special remedial course at the American
University of Nigeria in Yola.
After years of mounting criticism about the spread of
Islamist violence and attacks by armed gangs, Nigerian President Muhammadu
Buhari appointed a new military high command last week.
Hopes were high after army successes against Boko Haram in
2015 and 2016, but with the rise of Islamic State’s West African branch,
formerly part of Boko Haram, parts of the northeast have been experiencing more
frequent attacks.
While Thursday’s phone call put an end to the family’s
agonizing wait for news, Maiyanga said he still did not know when they would be
able to see Halima.
“I’m hoping to hear more news from the military,” he said.
* Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani writes for Thomson Reuters
Foundation
Click to signup for FREE news updates, latest information and hottest gists everyday
Advertise on NigerianEye.com to reach thousands of our daily users
No comments
Post a Comment
Kindly drop a comment below.
(Comments are moderated. Clean comments will be approved immediately)
Advert Enquires - Reach out to us at NigerianEye@gmail.com