Young girls snatched from their villages by fighters from the world's
deadliest terror group are volunteering to be suicide bombers to escape
hunger and rape. For the thousands of schoolgirls kidnapped by
Boko Haram, having explosives strapped to their bodies or hidden in a
basket on their heads is the only chance of escape.
The number of
children used in suicide bombings by the Nigerian terror group has
risen 11-fold from four in 2014 to 44 in 2015 according to the UN.
Three quarters of all child bombers are girls, the BBC reported.
Fati, 16, who managed to flee to the Minawo refugee camp in Camaroon
after being kidnapped and raped by Boko Haram fighters told CNN the girls would compete with each other to be picked for the deadly mission.
She said: "They came to us to pick us. They would ask, 'Who wants to be a suicide bomber?'
"The girls would shout, 'me, me, me.' They were fighting to do the suicide bombings."
But
instead of choosing death, Fati said volunteering for these missions
was often the only hope these young girls had of getting away.
She
added: "If they give them a suicide bomb, then maybe they would meet
soldiers, tell them, 'I have a bomb on me' and they could remove the
bomb. They can run away."
In 2015 there were 151 bombings carried out in Nigeria, Cameroon and Niger, compared to just 32 the year before.
Fati endured two years of rape and hunger at the hands of the terrorists
According to the UN's report, Cameroon has the highest number of
child suicide attacks, some involving children who are as young as
eight.
The girls are often drugged and the bombs detonated remotely.
The
rise in suicide attacks is being linked to the increasing desperation
of Boko Haram fighters who are being driven out of their strongholds in
the Sambisa Forest by coalition bombing raids.
Although some fighters are defecting, many more are choosing increasingly brutal ways to fight back.
Fati,
who was kidnapped and raped in 2014, was herself freed when her fighter
'husband' defected and tried to flee over the border.
But for the girls who do escape, life can be incredibly difficult as
they are shunned and ostracised by civilians who are worried they could
be hiding bombs.
Mohammed Amodu, a refugee leader told CNN: "If
we see a strange girl, she may be a suicide bomber. Perhaps their mind
is with Boko Haram."
The UN report was released nearly two years
after the #BringBackOurGirls social media campaign was launched to save
276 girls seized by Boko Haram from the village of Chibok .
Despite international attention, the girls have not yet been found.- Mirror
No comments:
Post a Comment