Editor’s note: Alkasim Abdulkadir, the head of media and communications at the Presidential Committee on the North East Initiatives (PCNI) writes on his recent trip to Chibok community in Borno state.
The trip of uncertainty
A combat readied soldier delicately held the anti-aircraft gun at the back of the open van, three other armed soldiers precariously stand beside him scanning the morning traffic as we drive out of Maiduguri. Soon enough we were cruising out of the city; escorted by another van mounted by stern looking soldiers at the rear.
These were the complements the theater commander Major-General Lucky Irabor had described as unbroken special escort when the leader of our delegation, the Vice Chairman of the Presidential Committee of the North East (PCNI), Alhaji Tijjani Tumsah led us on a courtesy visit to the theater command a day earlier.
Their task that day was to take us to Chibok and back safely. The town had grabbed global consciousness in the wake of the abduction of girls at Girls Government Secondary School on April 14, 2014. The pristine and consistent work of the Bring Back Our Girls movement has also ensured the incident remains in our collective hearts.
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Most of us in the convoy were passing through the Damboa road since it was opened for the first time recently. Soon enough the now familiar sights of wanton destruction, mortar pockmarks on walls came into view shocking those who were seeing it for the first time. The emptied shells on the right and left shoulders of the road and fallen mobile phone masts all told tales of death and devastation. We passed empty settlements, homes that had become the abode of insurgents until early 2015. Every few kilometers one is accosted with the ruins of hamlets that are now fading memories in the minds of the townsmen.
We passed soldiers at desolate intersections, lonely sentries waiting for slight movements in the shrubs to shoot. Shortly after passing Masba village, a loud ricochet followed by a volley of AA bullets interrupted our chatter; it stunned us into our thoughts as our eyes scanned to see if there were any movements around the shrubs. Fortunately, they were simply warning shots by our escorts however, our hearts had skipped several beats at the possibility of near mortality.
A rebound for Damboa
Hundreds of thousands of Internal Displaced Persons (IDP) families from Damboa hitherto were part of the IDP population in camps in Borno state, four months ago they went back home after a safety assessment by the army. Today, there are clear signs of a bounce back, amidst great reconstruction going on there.
Along the roadsides the greatest sign of recoveries are the fresh oranges, guava, carrots and the vegetables on sale. There were also lush green farmlands of spring onions spreading as far as the eyes can see and truckloads of commodities passing through -a testimony of livelihoods slowly coming back after years of displacement.
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Arriving Chibok
At Damboa, we took a detour to Chibok, passing through an undulating and never been tarred road. We were told it is even more torturous and impassable during the raining season. The journey from Maiduguri should have slightly been more than an hour; however it took us four hours to get there. At last we arrived Chibok and drove straight to GGSS Chibok, where we were received by Mr Yaga Yagarwa the local government chairman and other cheerful elders of the community.
We went round the ongoing ambitious construction of the school which will include a race track, ICT halls and staff residencies when completed; the project is intended to be a model institution in defiance to the Boko Haram ideology and a tribute to egalitarian values.
A call for greater support for Chibok
The governor of Borno state, Kashim Shettima continues to personally be involved in the development of the Chibok community.
Last year, he spent Boxing Day with them and pledged to continue working in the interest of the released Chibok girls. Most importantly, 1.8 billion naira has been earmarked for the Damboa-Chibok-Mbalala fifty-five kilometer road in this year’s budget.
The Church of the Brethren in Nigeria, alongside the Midland Church of the Brethren in the United States continues to also support the people of Chibok, not only spiritually but also in cash donations and other non-food items.
The Victims Support Fund is also implementing its livelihood program –providing support for small business and skills empowerment and the forster care project in Chibok where it places orphans under the care of fparents and pays them a monthly stipend.
The PCNI sub-committee on Education under Professor Hauwa Biu is also committed to revamping the educational infrastructure in Chibok LGA and also scaling up the livelihood support in the area.
But the Chibok we saw needs more from INGOs, local NGOs and above all everyday citizens. It needs bore holes, psycho-social support, agricultural inputs, primary health care centers amongst several other things.
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We left behind a community of resilient people, from young girls riding bicycles home after a day of studies, to women with stacks of fire wood tied to their bicycles –indeed the women of Chibok are inseparable from their bicycles.
360naze
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