It was the hashtag that turned the spotlight on the crisis of Nigerian girls and women being abducted by Boko Haram: #BringBackOurGirls.
But now that government and humanitarian efforts are resulting in some
women being rescued from the Islamic militant group and returned to
their homes, it seems not all Nigerians are welcoming them with open
arms.
According to a joint report
released Tuesday by UNICEF and human rights group International Alert,
many women and teen girls who were once held by Boko Haram are being
rejected by their families and communities. People treat the former
captives with mistrust over fears the women have become radicalized supporters
of the extremists. But the suspicious behavior of family members tends
to become explicit persecution if the former captives bore children
after being sexually assaulted by members of Boko Haram.
RELATED: Despite Boko Haram, Activists Are Bringing Education Back to Girls in Nigeria
The
babies may be innocent, but they are seen by locals as being infected
with “bad blood” from their rapist Boko Haram fathers, according to the
report. “There is a belief that, like their fathers, the children will
inevitably do what hyenas do and ‘eat’ the innocent dogs around them,”
wrote the report’s authors.
Rejected
by their families and neighbors, many of the women and their children
are being pushed into poverty. To avoid homelessness and to provide for
their babies, some are turning to prostitution to earn money. As a
result, the children themselves are “at risk of rejection, abandonment,
discrimination, and potential violence,” wrote the report’s authors.
“These
findings show a pressing need to do more to reintegrate those returning
from captivity by Boko Haram,” Kimairis Toogood, International Alert’s
peace-building adviser in Nigeria, said in a statement. “Many of these
girls already face lasting trauma of sexual violence and being separated
from their families, so we must ensure they get all the support they
need when they finally return.”
Approximately
2,000 women and girls have been abducted since 2012, but international
awareness was only raised in late April 2014 after Boko Haram snatched
nearly 300 girls from a school in the town of Chibok, in northeastern
Nigeria. The hashtag stems from the Bring Back Our Girls movement, which
was created that spring at a rally by Obiageli Ezekwesili, the former Federal Minister of Education of Nigeria.
Nigerians subsequently shared the hashtag
on social media, and it was picked up around the world—including by
celebs such as Rihanna, first lady Michelle Obama, and girls education
activist Malala Yousafzai. Yousafzai went to Nigeria in July 2014 and
demanded that the nation’s president Goodluck Jonathan mobilize the government and take action. Despite the success of the hashtag campaign in raising awareness, those nearly 300 abducted schoolgirls still haven’t been returned home.
As
for those girls and women who have been rescued, only to face a hostile
homecoming, International Alert and UNICEF said more humanitarian
assistance for them is needed. “There is a fear that if the needs
of these survivors and returning populations are not met, these factors
could add another dimension to an already complex conflict situation in
northeast Nigeria,” said Toogood.
Kidnapped Nigerian Girls Get Unexpectedly Hostile Homecoming
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